By Bobby Davis

God Was There – Eric and Marilyn Durant

Eric and Marilyn Durant

By Bobby Davis

Eric Durant grew up in Queens, New York, where his father worked as a systems engineer with IBM and his mother worked as a secretary in the JFK Airport post office.

“I can’t say their marriage was a very happy one,” he says, “and we didn’t see much of my dad, even when he wasn’t working. So until his passing, my father figure was my paternal grandfather, who was a very good man, full of love, and generosity.”

But however much love he received from his mother and grandfather, Eric still faced the reality of growing up on the streets of New York City. “I guess violence just seemed normal to me,” he says. “On my way to school I was on my own. Predatory mobs, guns, robberies, yellow tape, and crime scenes—I was exposed to all these, and a lot more I wish I could forget. So I joined a gang to survive, but unlike many of the boys, I wouldn’t carry a weapon. I was small, fast, and unusually strong, so my gang members nicknamed me Taz—short for theTasmanian devil cartoon character. The brutality of the streets nurtured an almost unquenchable anger; an anger that just grew worse with each confrontation. Fenced in by wolves, weakness and fear was not something you showed, so I hid it well and deep, and there it stayed.

“For 18 years I rarely wandered beyond the stony borders of the city, but I remember the first time I saw the stars. It was on a Boy Scout trip toVirginia, and I was in awe! When I’m old enough I’ll leave the city, aim for the stars, and never look back, I thought.”

Godly Influence

Although his parents were both raised Catholics, Eric’s mother raised her children as Baptists. “She read the Bible and prayed for us all the time,” he says. “She taught us about God, and gave each of us a Bible. But while I enjoyed church, it just didn’t make sense to me.  Why were we going to church on one day, while the Jews in the Bible worshipped on Saturday? And why did some people say you go to Heaven when you die, while others say you’re asleep in the ground? I believed in God, but I was never sure which denomination to follow.”

Despite his mom’s best efforts, Eric was in his teens before he read his first book—a biography of Robert L. Scott, Jr., America’s famous fighter ace from WWII. “As I read God Is My Co-Pilot, I thought, He’s like me, a fighter trapped in a war zone! Suddenly, I could escape my hostile world through books and explore science, the adventures of heroes, and the dreams of theologians.

My relationship with my gang quickly faded, and my love of books led me to the Bible. The words it contained sealed my path forever! My Bible would eventually travel with me around the globe—through danger zones and pastures, right up to my baptism. Someone else other than my mom cared for me and He lived in our hearts and dwelt among the stars.

“Later in life my mom told me she prayed for my safety every day. She knew more than I thought. I wasn’t hiding anything she didn’t already suspect. It is miraculous how God protected me through those years, completely unscathed. ”

Eric moved to Florida and worked for the U.S. Postal Service. Then one day, a very tall man approached him in the parking lot and handed him a pamphlet, saying, “You need this.”

“It was a pamphlet about the Sabbath, the Antichrist, and the three angels’ messages of Revelation 14,” Eric recalls, “but I didn’t think much of it, so I threw it in a junk drawer, where it sat for two years. About the third time I almost threw it out, I thought, I should read this first—and my world changed forever! This was the truth I’d been searching for. It answered key questions, but created many more, so I dug deeper into my Bible until it became real. Gone was the hip-hop music and the parties. I was on a mission to find more answers, and as I searched, my anger began to subside.”

Miraculous Landing

Returning to New York, Eric worked at his mother’s post office, but a few years later he was restless. “I felt I needed something more challenging,” he says, “so my father agreed to give me money for college. However, I had other ideas, so I moved to the West Coast and used the money to enroll in flight school, instead!”

One experience in flight school stands out in Eric’s mind. Halfway through a long solo flight from California to Arizona and back, he realized he had been blown 30–40 miles off course by strong winds over the Mojave Desert. Correcting his course, he noticed he was running dangerously low on fuel. Then suddenly, he  saw a huge anvil cloud hanging over the airport. It had been a beautiful day when he’d left California, so he hadn’t checked the weather before flying back. Now his fuel gauge was on the red line.The tower reported moderate to severe wind sheer and light rain, and passenger jets were aborting their landings. But Eric had no choice. Tightening his seat belt, he began his approach and suddenly he hit turbulence! “Only my seatbelt kept me from being thrown into the back seat of my small Cessna as the wind tried to flip my little airplane on its back,” he recalls. “Desperately, I cried to God for help—and a mere second later the air was dead calm! I touched down without a burble between my prayer and the runway!

“My whole flight class came out to watch me land, and my instructor walked out and scolded me after I turned off the engine. ‘You should have diverted to another airport!’ he barked. ‘Why did you fly in from the east instead of north? Were you lost?’

“I never told him who really landed my airplane, but I knew! I was convicted yet again that God was with me. He’d heard my prayer.”

B-52H Bomber
The Boeing B-52H Stratofortress is a long-range strategic bomber capable of carrying up to 70,000 pounds of weapons, with a typical combat range of more than 8,800 miles without aerial refueling.

After flying commercially for four years, Eric took a job in testing and development for the military at Vandenberg AFB, in California. Later, he joined a flight test group onboard a B-52H bomber at Barksdale AFB in Louisiana.

“We developed and tested all manner of flight systems and flew sorties around the globe,” he says, “but while I enjoyed the sciences and engineering, my growing faith prompted my heart in another direction.

Eric's Equipment

“I still hadn’t found a Sabbath-keeping church,” he recalls, “but one day, as I searched through the channels, I found a fuzzy 3ABN station out of Shreveport. I couldn’t make out a picture, but the audio came through loud and clear. They were talking about the Sabbath!”

For the next two years, Eric listened night after night. “I heard truth flooding from my static-filled TV, and it all resonated with me,”
he says. “I was captured by the message—the same message I’d read on that pamphlet ten years earlier. No one spoke like this! These speakers had the answers I’d been seeking.

“Finally, one day I heard ‘Seventh-day Adventists,’ and I knew this was the church I must attend. It had the biblical truth I needed. It answered the questions I’d had all my life.”

New Purpose

Smoke was pouring out of a neighbor’s apartment one day as Eric came home. Shouting after the landlord, they ran upstairs and kicked in the door. The man was passed out on the couch, so Eric crouched under the smoke and dragged him to safety while his landlord put out the kitchen fire with an extinguisher.

“The military wanted to give me an award, but I turned them down,” Eric says. “I just did what anyone would do, but I felt wonderful. Later, I thought, We’re placed in this world to help one another. And what better way is there to help, than to lead them to Jesus? It was time to go to church, and there was only one choice!

“The Philadelphia Seventh-day Adventist Church welcomed me with open arms and southern hospitality. For the first time in my life the message and the gospel seemed right, but despite all this, a great war began raging inside me. Strange nightmares frightened me so much I’d climb out of bed and onto my knees to pray. The  devil doesn’t want me to get baptized! I realized. I need to do it now!”

Approaching his pastor, Eric shared about his struggle, and his need to be baptized. “It was just after the 9/11 attack, America was at war, and I might be deployed overseas any day,” he explains. “So I was baptized the following Sabbath, and my heart was sealed forever! Gone was the military warrior, the combat airman, the weapons systems developer. The remaining anger, the cursing, and the drinking quickly faded away, never to return.”

Love and Ambition

Eric was honorably discharged from the military two months later and moved to Colorado to take a position as a spacecraft systems engineer.

“That’s where I met and married my best friend Marilyn,” he says, “but soon both of us were under attack. First we were robbed of everything of value, except each other; a week later, a truck ran into us at a stop light. Marilyn lost her job, and the puppy I bought her was run over by a car in a freak accident; but our faith held strong.

“On our honeymoon cruise I couldn’t shake my concerns about my career path, and I well remember praying on our ship’s balcony. God, I asked, is my career becoming a diversion? Is this right for me? I need a sign, Lord!

“I have no doubt that the Lord sent that pale-colored dove that flew in from the deep blue sky moments later. It lingered just a few feet from where I’d knelt, and then vanished into the distance. I can’t tell you how special that moment was. It wasn’t what I’d expected, but was certainly what I’d needed. God was still there!”

Several years later Eric was transferred to Washington State, and his wife Marilyn was baptized there after a Lyle Albrecht series. It was a happy day for the couple. They were now united in their faith, as well.

Not long afterward, Eric had a dream that puzzled them both. “In my dream, the dove from my honeymoon cruise flew in from the sun and landed on a rock that looked like a round loaf of bread,” he remembers. “But it just sat there, looking at me and waiting.

“Marilyn and I couldn’t make sense of it then, but looking back, I realize that the Holy Spirit was waiting for me to do something. I hadn’t engaged with God’s plan for my life yet.”

Their next move was to Washington, D.C., where Eric says corporate success became an alluring distraction. But something kept nagging at him.

“I began missing what I’d had back in Louisiana. My religious zeal was gone.The joys of witnessing, Bible studies, and fellowship with Christians were lost in the turmoil of long hours, government service, and corporate and personal gain. I was living in a dog-eat-dog environment where everyone advertised their advanced degrees and impeccable credentials, but no one said anything about faith, the gospel, or the Lord. It reminded me of my life on the streets of New York, except we received six-figure salaries and stock options.

“Finally, I realized that rising up the ladder without a consistent relationship with the Lord is not success, but genuine failure. My spiritual interest was heightened, and my self-serving ambition started to bleed away. I could no longer remain where predatory ambition was rewarded and politicking reigned. I was a Christian, and it just wasn’t  compatible.”

Eric's Bible

Under pressure for his beliefs and Sabbath keeping, Eric turned to his Bible one day as he prayed for help. “The pages parted to Psalm 124,” he says, “and the words touched me deeply. Then, just a few days later I received a job offer and a promotion, while my persecutors fell victim to leadership reductions and demotions. The Psalms seemed prophetic, and the Lord was still there!”

Lowest Hour and Greatest Victory

Returning to the West Coast, Eric and Marilyn sought a closer relationship with the Lord. “The corporate hustle was gone, and career ambitions paled in comparison to my faith as we settled in,” he says. “I continued to do well for the next few years, and, by the grace God, I was being mentored for further advancement. But a phone call started a ride to the lowest points imaginable.

“First, we discovered that Marilyn’s mom had died unexpectedly in her sleep in her small home in Pueblo, Colorado. Then, two months later, I took the next flight out to be with my mom after hearing she wasn’t fully awakening from surgery. Minutes after I held her hand, her heart stopped beating, and just over a week later, my dad died from cancer.

“It was almost more than we could bear, but we clung to the Lord. Job’s trials resonated with us, and his great test of faith drew us closer to our Savior.”

The trials continued. Windows mysteriously shattered, relatives suffered car accidents, Eric’s sister suffered complications during surgery, and her children began seeing their deceased grandmother appearing in their rooms.

“To this day we pray that God will protect my sister and her family,” Eric says.

I’m Ready

“I began feeling a very strong impression that kept whispering, It’s time. This impression clung to me for well over a week, so I began whispering back, I’m ready.

“I felt as if a great door had permanently closed behind me, but the next door hadn’t opened yet. Finally, I prayed, ‘What do You want, Lord? Make it clear and I’ll follow!’ and the next morning I received an e-mail about a position with 3ABN in Illinois!

“Over the next few weeks I prayed twice more, asking God if this was truly His will—and each time, 3ABN called me within the hour about the position!

“I had a clear answer, but I still struggled. Then I thought of the story of the rich young man of whom Christ asked, ‘Give all you have to the poor and come follow Me.’

“God had left me with just two choices, and a month and a half later I left my company, we got rid of most of what we owned, and joined the staff at 3ABN!”

Lessons of Salvation and Joy

Eric says he recently read a biography and was left with the inescapable impression that the trials Abraham Lincoln faced as a young adult served as training and preparation for the day he was called upon to lead a lamb-like nation from a divisive war, and a people from slavery.

“I’ve come to terms with the notion that the trials we face are allowed by God as preparation, so He can use our aquired strengths to lead others from the slavery of sin to freedom through Christ Jesus,” he says. “I’ve learned that the greatest joys come from giving, and the satisfaction of serving the Lord in any capacity far surpasses all the increases of life. It is a golden peace that is shaped to fill that infinite void in our heart—a void that can’t be gratified by anything else, though we might desperately try!

“I learned rather late that material gains, awards, and accolades amount to nothing without a genuine surrender and service to Christ Jesus. A life of service to my Lord lays before me—pages to be written. I pray that He will guide all of us continually and lead us to a permanent surrender.

“God is not our co-pilot, He is our Captain, steering us to our eternal home!”

Editor’s note: Today Eric serves the Lord at 3ABN as a broadcast engineer, while Marilyn serves as our assistant Call Center manager. We love and appreciate them both so much, and their humble service to the Lord inspires us all!

 


Thompsonville Seventh-day Adventist Church

Thompsonville Seventh-day Adventist Church
When you’re in Thompsonville, Illinois, be sure to join Eric and Marilyn on Sabbath at the Thompsonville Seventh-day Adventist Church at 3577 Angel Lane. They will be glad to meet you!

Thompsonville Seventh-day Adventist Church Website

By Bobby Davis

That Annoying Channel – Jack and Charma Shepler

Jack and Charma Shepler

By Bobby Davis

Jack Shepler grew up in the small town of Temperance, Michigan. “We had fruit trees and grew our own vegetables,” he says. “I can even remember when we got our first TV! Then, in 1957, we moved to Port Clinton, Ohio, where my dad worked for the Ford Motor Company.

“I’m the youngest of five kids, and my sister and I went to Sunday School sometimes. We were Lutherans, but I only remember going to church one time with my family.”

As idyllic as life seemed, things turned tragic for Jack at the young age of 14 with the devastating loss of his father. “I missed him greatly, and just couldn’t get used to the fact that he wasn’t there anymore,” he recalls. “I kept dreaming he was coming back, but he never did.”

After high school, Jack had many different jobs. He got married when he was 26 and they had one child. He studied drafting and welding in college, and repaired small engines to support his family. Then he left college and worked as a newspaper circulation manager.

Newspapers

“Sadly, my marriage only lasted five years, and when the company I worked for went out of business, I decided to start a newspaper, myself,” Jack recalls. “It was a great learning tool, but it lasted for less than a year, so I worked as a service manager for tool rental company in Ashland, Ohio. I also got remarried to a woman who had four daughters, and we had twin sons and a daughter together.

“When that company also went out of business, I started yet another newspaper, but my second marriage also ended in divorce. I kept my three children, and desperate for help, I began taking them to the Lutheran church every Sunday and got them involved in every activity possible. I even dedicated my newspaper to Christ and began running a Proverb on the masthead. While I struggled to keep it together, I was injured in three auto accidents in less than 14 months, and that left me pretty much disabled.

“At this point I was producing the whole newspaper by myself, and I was in pain all the time,” he says. “I was so overwhelmed by everything that I sent my children to live with their mother. That was a difficult day.”

More Trouble

Desperately clinging to God, Jack closed his secular business to start a Christian newspaper. “That didn’t work out, either, so I moved to Toledo, to be near my sisters and my mother. Meanwhile, I went through many doctors who couldn’t seem to diagnose me, until they finally discovered I had a cyst growing  in my head. It was so big that it was affecting my breathing and eyesight.”

After surgery, Jack says his health improved, but he had been diagnosed with diabetes, fibromyalgia, and a collapsed disc pressing on his spinal cord after the accidents. Overwhelmed by medical problems, he decided to use the money from his accident settlement to buy a small cabin in the Cumberland Mountains of Kentucky.

A Godly Wife

After two failed marriages, Jack left any future plans up to God. “I prayed every day for God to find the right woman for me, but only according to His will and His timing,” he says. That happened in August 2006, when he met Charma online.

Jack and Charma
Jack and Charma were married in the Philippines, but had to wait over a year before she could get her visa.

“She was born and raised in the small village of Sindangan, in the southern Philippine island of Mindanao. We talked to each other a lot by video, and the first time I saw her cry I knew she was the one!” he exclaims. “By the next year, we were ready to marry.”

After a long plane ride, Jack finally met Charma for the first time, and they both realized that their feelings were genuine. “We met on a Friday and were married the following Tuesday,” he says. “We spent three weeks together before I returned, but it was over a year before her visa cleared, and she arrived in the United States.”

Sky Angel and 3ABN

When he moved to Kentucky, Jack bought a Sky Angel dish, which carried a package of Christian channels, including 3ABN. “I watched 3ABN a few times,” he says, “but then I vowed I wouldn’t watch it anymore, since what I saw disagreed with what I’d always believed. They kept saying that we wouldn’t automatically go to Heaven when we die, and I didn’t want to hear that my father wasn’t in Heaven!” he says.

Remote Control“Then Sky Angel went off the air, and since I couldn’t pick up anything else, I thought I’d be without TV altogether. Oh, there were a couple of foreign channels that would occasionally broadcast on that satellite, but 3ABN was always there, of course. So when boredom eventually overtook my ill feelings, I began watching it, because it was all I could get on my satellite dish.

“Doug Batchelor was the one who really got through to me,” Jack says. “I began to see what the Bible taught, and the Holy Spirit began working on my heart.

“The day came when I decided I wanted to become a Seventh-day Adventist, but now I had a huge problem on my hands. I had to tell my wife that something important had happened, but I was afraid to tell her what, since she had been a lifelong Catholic. I didn’t know how she’d react, so I waited until she arrived. However, I knew I had to be an Adventist, regardless of her decision.”

What Do You Think?

Charma finally arrived, and since 3ABN was the only television channel available, she began watching it, too. “I didn’t really ask her about it much,” Jack admits. “Instead, I let her develop her own opinion.

“Then came the day when we found out the satellite was changing to digital, and I knew we would lose your channel. So I finally asked her, ‘What do you think about all these new ideas?’

“You can’t imagine how shocked I was when I heard her say that she understood the truth she had been hearing, and completely agreed with it!”

A Church Family

Jack and Charma attended three Seventh-day Adventist churches in Kentucky, but as happy as they were together, mountain life didn’t really appeal to Charma. “We were 45 minutes away from anywhere,” Jack says, “so when my brother invited us to move to Pensacola, Florida, we decided to go.

Abandon Ship“We attended an Adventist church in Pensacola and were baptized together. That was one of the happiest days of our lives. But after a while, I began to feel uncomfortable, so I decided to go to the pastor with my concerns. He encouraged me to stick it out, and gave me a book by Ty Gibson called, Abandon Ship? 

“The book was very good,” Jack says. “We decided to stay. I’m glad we did, because I realize we are very close to the end times, and we needed to be a part of the Remnant Church.”

Seeking God’s Will

But there’s more to this story. “After we became Adventists, I had my biggest realization,” Jack exclaims. “I finally discovered that God has something He wants me to do for Him! I have to take an active part in my church and tell others about Jesus. So I started writing down my testimony.

“Then, when a church friend died, I realized that I didn’t even know he was terminally ill. I felt so bad about that, and the thought struck me, Did anyone pray for his healing?

“I began praying for others more, and shortly after that, our pastor started a series on the Holy Spirit, and how to get involved in church. But it was a series by Pastor Kenneth Cox on 3ABN that drove the point home all the way. God was speaking to me, and He wanted me to do something for Him.

While I was contemplating all this, I remembered a book I had previously read by Mark Finley called, Revive Us Again. I’ve read it so many times the pages are falling out!

“I decided to start a weekly Bible study based on that book and was preparing my first session when my phone rang and 3ABN World asked me if they could print my story!”

Perfect Timing

Isn’t God’s timing perfect? Jack’s testimony underscores Jesus’ call to all who follow Him. We can’t wait to see what God has in store next for Jack and Charma, but we do know that they make every effort to share the good news they have found with all those they meet.

Have you made your decision to follow Jesus? Have you taken the step to look up your local Seventh-day Adventist church? Don’t wait. There are those who desperately need your help, both in and out of the church.

Share your story with us, and share it freely with all those who will hear you. You can help some that others can’t, and the Lord Jesus hopes you’ll use your experience to bring hope and salvation to those around you.


University Parkway Seventh-day Adventist Church – Pensacola, Florida

University Parkway Seventh-day Adventist Church
If you live nearby, or are visiting in the Pensacola area, why not come and worship with Jack and Charma? You’ll find their church at 8751 University Parkway. They’d love to meet you!

 

By Bobby Davis

The Buried Antenna – Robert Jinings

By Bobby Davis

Born in Portland, Oregon, Robert Jinings was the youngest of three children. His father had a cow-calf operation raising beef cattle, and Robert says he enjoyed a good  upbringing on the farm.

“However, religion and God were never mentioned in our home,” he says, “and while I had some vague belief in a Higher Power, I had no idea what that was, really.”

Robert JinningsRobert says he began getting into drugs when he was a teenager. “It was the hippie era, and because of this, I was exposed to all sorts of Eastern religion ideas,” he says. “But I never understood it all, and honestly, I never gave those things much thought because it was too confusing. The only religious exposure I ever had was from my uncle, who was a Lutheran. He was always called on to say the Lord’s Prayer during holiday meals and family picnics, but we never spoke about God, or Jesus, or the Holy Spirit. These topics were never discussed in my family, but they weren’t looked down on, either. We were taught not to look down on people.”

Difficult Years

Robert says he attended a community college for a year and a half before dropping out. “I was getting into alcohol and drugs a lot,” he says. “Alcohol, even excessive drinking, was acceptable in my family, so by the time I was in my late teens I was a daily drinker and continued that way for the next 17 years. I was also using cocaine and amphetamines, so I was pretty confused. But somehow, I never got in trouble with the law.

“In 1978 I married a lady bartender and we drank together, so things stayed about the same. I worked in construction and refurbished sawmill machinery before beginning a career in durable medical equipment, where I eventually wound up building specialized electronic equipment for quadriplegic and pediatric patients.

A Turning Point

Things began to change when Robert’s wife began attending aerobics classes at a local Baptist church. “My wife had given her heart to the Lord when she was young, and now she started coming back to the Jesus” he says. “She stopped drinking and doing all those things, but I kept on. When she invited me, I went to a Sunday service or two, but I couldn’t figure out what was going on because I didn’t know anything about the Bible.

“Later, after completing work on a large church in Portland, I was invited, along with all the workers, to their grand opening. As I listened, I was convicted of my need for God, but I didn’t tell anybody. Two days went by, and I just couldn’t take it anymore, so I prayed, God help me! If You’re real, I need help. I can’t get away from the alcohol and drugs by myself.

“That day I felt the presence of God for the first time,” Robert exclaims. “I didn’t see or hear anything, but I knew He was there for me! Four or five days after telling God I needed help by repeating the Sinner’s Prayer, I accepted Jesus Christ into my life and was relieved of my craving for alcohol and drugs. Of course, Satan didn’t give up easy, and a month or so later I drank again, but it was a one-day deal, and that was the last time.”

Robert studied with his pastor for about six months before he was baptized, “And what a great day that was! My wife and I were baptized together, and I felt the presence of the Holy Spirit bringing about a complete change in me,” he says. “I was in complete obedience, doing what God wanted me to do.”

More Changes

Sadly, though, after 24 years of marriage, and after raising a son and a daughter, Robert’s wife sought a divorce—just as he was grieving his father’s death, and just as he became very ill.

“I had vertigo so badly that I could hardly stand up, and finally I was diagnosed with an immune deficiency where my body thinks I have an inner ear infection and attacks it! All that brought on tremendous anxiety, and unfortunately, there is no cure.

“I felt like everything was falling apart at the seams, so I decided to move my fifth-wheel trailer up to my niece’s farm near Redmond, Oregon. It was a nice place in the middle of nowhere, and I was very grateful to be near my niece, since my illness made it hard for me to take care of myself.

Hal Steenson on Heaven's Point of View program
Hal Steenson on Heaven’s Point of View was one of the programs Robert could pick up in his fifth-wheel trailer near Redmond, Oregon.

“Although I didn’t watch much TV, one day I fixed something to eat and found a channel I’d never seen before called 3ABN. Danny Shelton was interviewing some missionaries, and suddenly I realized it was a Christian station. As I watched I began hearing things I’d never heard before, so I kept watching and eventually found myself glued to the TV 12 hours a day! I couldn’t get enough of Shelley Quinn’s program, Exalting His Word, or Hal Steenson’s Heaven’s Point of View. Then I began watching Doug Batchelor’s Here We Stand series, and other evangelists, like Lyle Albrecht, Kenneth Cox, and David Asscherick. Occasionally I’d watch another Christian network but kept wondering why the preachers were all yelling at me. In contrast, 3ABN’s presenters were sincere, and everyone one of them said, ‘Check it out for yourself from the Bible. If it’s not in the Bible, then don’t believe it!’ That was pretty revolutionary for me, since I was conditioned to believe what the pastor, deacons, and elders said without question.

“Finally, I realized that the message on 3ABN was Seventh-day Adventist. I’d never heard of the seventh-day Sabbath, and it was the most striking new teaching I’d ever heard. When I accepted it, the Lord directed me to prophecies of Daniel and Revelation. These were a complete mystery to me, since I had never even read the book of Daniel, but the Holy Spirit was working hard, and the conviction grew that I needed to join this church.”

Soon Robert visited the Redmond Seventh-day Adventist Church, and joined a small study group. Finally, he asked the leader, “So what do I have to do to join the church?” and was told that he could either be baptized or join the church by profession of faith. “Since I had not left the Lord since being baptized, I decided to join the Adventist Church by profession of faith,” he says. “It was a wonderful day, and I was excited about my new faith.”

However, in a few short weeks, Robert’s illness took a turn for the worse. “I decided to move into town so I could be near their medical facilities,” he says. “Although my church is only a mile away, I can’t drive that far. I also cannot sit for long, since my vertigo makes me so sick. So I attend when I can, and I know the Lord loves me and will continue to be my strength. Several people from church stop by from time to time,” he continues, “and I have a friend who brings me a Sabbath School Quarterly, as well as DVDs, or inspirational books. My friend Donna, who lives about 20 miles away used to visit often, but her eyesight has deteriorated, so she can’t make it to church, either. We talk and text a lot, and I let people know that I’m doing okay.”

Robert tries to share his faith with his neighbors at the mobile home park where he lives, and says he finds it interesting that when he lived 30 miles out of town, he could pick up 3ABN just fine. “But I guess the trees here get in the way of the signal, even though I’m much closer to the tower, so now I only get 3ABN about 45 percent of the time. It’s okay, though,” he adds, “because I’ve recorded lots of programs over the years, so it’s not like I’m without instruction.

“Years ago, when I still lived outside of town, we were going to get a big winter storm with high winds, so I decided to crank down my TV antenna so it wouldn’t get blown over. A day and a half later, I had three feet of snow covering my antenna, and couldn’t get any of our local stations. But 3ABN’s signal was still clear!

“I’ve never heard the message so plainly, clearly, and sincerely. It’s like God is speaking to me through 3ABN all the time. The Bible says in John 8:32, “You shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” As far as I’m concerned, 3ABN proclaims nothing but the truth. It’s hard to find sincere people, so I just praise God that He led me to you!”

By Bobby Davis

Eva’s Journey – Eva Borja-Land

Eva and Jeremiah

By Bobby Davis

Eva Borja-Land says she remembered having serious questions about church, even at a young age. “I was born in the Bicol Region of Luzon Island in the Philippines,” she says, “and I was the fifth of eight children.

“My parents raised us in the Roman Catholic church,” she continues, “but honestly, I couldn’t understand a single word the priest was saying, since mass was spoken in Latin. And then there was my first—and last—confession, a mandatory rule at my school. I confessed my sins once, but never again! Why should I tell my sins to a priest? I wondered. Why not just pray to God directly?” 

By the time Eva was in high school, she had stopped attending church, and as she studied to become an optometrist, her life became busy, and she never went back.

Busy Life

Eva married her high school sweetheart and eventually they moved to the United States. “We settled in New York and had three children, “ she says. “Then I realized I wanted them to be grounded in some sort of faith, so I began taking them to the Catholic religious education classes each week.  But I still had those nagging questions!”

Life went on normally, and Eva says she led a busy life—until her husband died seven years ago. Adjusting to her loss was not easy, but one day she discovered a small New Testament Bible in her basement.

“I read it on the subway on my way to work,” she says, “and I really liked Jesus’ counsel. But when I reached Revelation, I put it down because I couldn’t understand it. Then, about five years ago, I began recalling the stories my father used to tell from the Old Testament, and it made me want to read those books, too, so I got a Bible and started right away.

“I read the Bible from cover to cover in six months,” she says, “and then I began searching through my Verizon Fios cable lineup for religious TV channels. I really liked Joel Olsteen, and he kept saying that I needed to find a Bible-based church to join. So I thought, I wonder where I might find one of those? 

“One day, while I was flipping through the channels, I found 3ABN. I kept watching, and the first thing I noticed was that they were talking about the Sabbath. Suddenly I thought, Wait a minute! The Bible talks about the Sabbath in both the Old and New Testament! It all made sense to me—and so did their explanations about the book of Revelation. So every time I was in the kitchen, or downstairs in the basement, 3ABN was on.

“My kids noticed and mentioned that I didn’t watch news anymore. I just wanted to know the truth, and every day I’d come home excited about watching 3ABN again. I watched all sorts of programs that would give a number to call for their free offers, but I never seemed to have a pen and paper handy. I remember especially wanting the Amazing Facts Bible study guides.”

The Sabbath

Soon Eva was convicted on the Sabbath, but she wondered how she should observe it. “I knew that the Jews kept the Sabbath holy, but they didn’t believe in Christ,” she says. “And since I had no idea who else might observe it, I finally asked a Christian friend of mine if she knew of any Christian religions that observed the Sabbath.

“ ‘Yeah,’ she said, ‘the Seventh-day Adventists worship on Saturday.’ So I searched for an Adventist church in the Yellow Pages, and I found several close by. One was a Korean church and the other was Filipino, but since I didn’t their worship schedule wasn’t posted, I kept looking until I found one that did. The following Sabbath morning I set out to go to church.

“I remember the day well,” Eva says. “The church was only 15 minutes away, but since there was a lot of snow on the ground, I left a little early—about an hour and a half early!” she adds with a smile. I just didn’t want to be late, but then I got lost and drove around and around for a while. I finally found the street, but just as I was about to get out of the car, something inside me said, Don’t go in! However, I’d troubled myself to leave the house early, and I’d gotten lost and had trouble finding the church, so I told myself, Of course you’re going in!”

Church

Eva sat in the very last pew, and soon the Sabbath School superintendent approached and asked if she was visiting. “I told her it was my first time in a Seventh-day Adventist church, and that I wanted to observe God’s holy day. The lady was very nice to me, and invited me to have lunch with her family, which I enjoyed. But when I told them I wanted to be baptized right away, they sort of looked at each other and said, ‘Well, let’s talk to the pastor and arrange for Bible studies first.’”

Eva had learned a lot from watching 3ABN, so when the she was given the Amazing Facts Bible study guides, she exclaimed, “Oh, I already know this!”

“They were surprised,” she says, “but the next Sabbath they gave me some advanced study guides, and I was so excited, I wanted to complete them all right away! However, they suggested we slow down and take our time, so I respected their decision, and eight months later I was baptized. In a way it was great, because I had a chance to tell all my family about it. They all supported me, although at first they wondered what this was all about.”

During her baptism, the pastor asked Eva what her favorite hymn was, and she answered, “Amazing Grace.” But as the congregation began singing, something broke inside of her. “I started crying, and soon everybody was crying!” she says. “I couldn’t understand why they were crying, but mine were tears of joy!”

Today, Eva is a member of the Bayanihan Filipino Seventh-day Adventist Church in Long Island City, New York. “I fell in love with that church family and transferred my membership there,” she says, “but I stay in touch with my friends who gave me my first Bible studies. I have three grown children, and my oldest son comes to church with me now and loves it.”

Eva and Eden on Hat Day
Eva has made many close friends, including Eden Tuburan, who posed with her recently on a “Hat Day.”

Eva is involved in her church, and loves to tell the children’s story. She also takes part in the service from the platform when asked.

“Her eyes sparkle with enthusiasm when she talks about her Lord, the true God she adores and worships,” says Pastor James Wong. “She endlessly inspires everybody around her, and whether she’s at home, at work, or at our church, her excitement is contagious. I often hear her say, ‘No one can stop me from talking about my God!’ ”

Happiness

Eva says it took time to adjust to the loss of her husband. “After I was baptized, my children kept saying, ‘Mom, you should think about marriage again.’ So I prayed and asked the Lord for someone who would enhance my faith. ‘I want a man who loves You,’ I’d pray, ‘because if he does, he’ll love me and my children, too.’ Then it wasn’t long before someone from church mentioned Adventist Singles ministry, and that’s where I met my new husband, Jeremiah Land, who lost his wife three years ago.

Eva and Jeremiah on their wedding day.
Eva and Jeremiah met on the Adventist Singles website. “His first letter was all about God, so we started talking,” she says, “and when I found out that he’d been praying for somebody who was joyful and easy going, I realized that he was praying for someone like me!”

“Jeremiah’s first letter was all about God, so we started talking. When I found out that he’d been praying for somebody who was joyful and easy going, I realized that he was praying for someone like me! I’d tell him, ‘Jeremiah, God gave you to me, and He gave me to you, so God is our bridge!’ We were married this past September 7, and Pastor Wong officiated at our marriage!” she adds with a smile.

Pastor Wong agrees. “Jeremiah is a strong Christian and very supportive,” he says. “They not only enjoy studying together, but are drawn closer to each other every passing day.”

Changes

How has Eva’s life changed after joining the church? “Well, I’ve become more patient in my attitude and character,” she says. “I used to get angry so fast, but nothing bothers me now. I’ve become much more compassionate, too, and I love to help people.

“But perhaps the most profound change is that I’ve learned that obedience to God’s commandments isn’t for Him, it’s for us! Obeying Him is easy to do because I love Him; and when we love someone, we want to do things that please them.

“My brothers and sisters and I are very close, and although they don’t go to church, they want to know what I know. Two of my sisters even drove from Connecticut to attend church with me, and another sister is thinking of moving to New York. She tells me that when she does, she’ll definitely come to church with me.

“I feel no hardships,” Eva concludes. “And if I did, I could care less. I only care about what God thinks of me!”

 


Bayanihan Seventh-day Adventist Church

Bayanihan Seventh-day Adventist Church
Eva tells the children’s story during a worship service at the Bayanihan Seventh-day Adventist Church.

If you’re in the area, why not stop in and worship with Eva and her church family? The Bayanihan Seventh-day Adventist Church holds services in English, and is located at 39-49 29th Street in Long Island City, New York. They’d love to meet you!

Bayanihan Seventh-day Adventist Church Website

By Bobby Davis

A Mother’s Prayers – Judy and Colin Marshall

Colin and Judy Marshall

By Bobby Davis

The Holy Spirit moves in marvelous ways upon the hearts of God’s children. Consider how He used 3ABN and a mother’s prayers to reach Colin and Judy Marshall from Salisbury, England.

Difficult Childhood

“I thought I stumbled onto 3ABN in 2003, in my birthplace of Nassau, Bahamas,” Judy begins, “But of course I know better. It was the Holy Spirit leading! I was amazed they weren’t begging for money, like the other religious channels, and as I listened, the Bible seemed to come alive and finally make sense. But this story really started long ago,” she adds.

“My parents were both artists and became Seventh-day Adventists early in their marriage. But by the time I was born, my father had decided to return to the Catholic faith, so that’s how we were raised,” Judy says. “In my early teens I left that religion because I never had any faith in confession, nor did I believe in purgatory. It amazed me that God supposedly loved us so much, but would burn someone in hell forever and ever!”

Although she had eight siblings, Judy says her father never showed interest in anyone but her. “He would return from his long trips abroad, his trunk overflowing with expensive clothes for me—and nothing for my baby sister or anyone else. I truly hated him for those things!” she recalls.

“After a thirty-five-year stormy marriage, my parents divorced—something mother tried to do several times before, but his death threats had always stopped her. Shortly after that, he returned to the house with a shotgun and blasted the walls until all the shells were gone. Miraculously, everyone was spared!”

After a nasty court battle, her Mother obtained custody of Judy and her younger sister, but a year later, Judy’s father convinced her to come study in Miami, Florida.

“Well, you can’t trust the devil,” she says, “because once I was enrolled, he announced that I’d never see my mother again! After many months, I managed to make a collect call to Mother and some people came and took me away from Daddy. But they put me in an orphanage, and all I could think was, How can I be in an orphanage when I have a family? I was there for five months until Mother finally won custody and I was returned to Nassau.”

Unfortunate Choices

“I gave my heart to the Lord in a evangelical church when I was fifteen, and I dreamed of becoming an evangelist,” Judy says. “But I eloped, instead, with my English boss a year later! He was twenty-nine and I was sixteen. He was an atheist, and I didn’t stand a chance!”

The plan was to get married in Mexico and then come back to Nassau in a few days. But soon Judy discovered that he had lied about being divorced and now he planned to fly to his mother’s place in Switzerland and tell everyone they were married.

Racked with guilt and shame, Judy wondered how she would ever face her family again—“And that’s what he was banking on!” she says. “Mother never received the letter I gave him to mail, and it almost killed her. She hardly ate for months!”

Six weeks later, they were in England, and Judy says their first year was fun—but the next seven were hellish. “The lies, gambling, womanizing, and physical abuse were awful, and after he managed to wring out the last drop of love and pity I had, I left him with my five-year-old and three-month-old baby when he was on another one of his ‘business trips.’ ”

Colin

Judy met Colin in 1978 and moved to Hong Kong, where eventually they married. “Colin was a loving and caring husband, and a good father to my daughter. But my ex had whisked my son away to Scotland, and it was killing me,” she says.

“My mother came to visit, and it must have broken her heart to see me smoking, drinking, and living in sin. My seven-year-old told me that Mother spent entire nights on her knees! We’d often sing hymns from her worn hymnal, and then I’d ask her to tell me Bible stories, which I could never get enough of!”

After Hong Kong, the Marshalls moved to Brunei, Saudi Arabia, and England before returning to the Bahamas. But stress was taking a heavy toll on their marriage.

“Recession was creeping in, and with all the stress from my beauty business, I began to enjoy my ice-cold chardonnay and my evening ciggies even more,” Judy says. “I pleaded with God to help my business, and to help me stop drinking and smoking. What is wrong with me? I wondered as I cried myself to sleep so many nights. Why has God turned His back on me?

“I was reading the Bible and going to church on Sundays. I had answered many altar calls, but in my heart I knew I wasn’t saved. I was sure that God had taken His Holy Spirit away from me!”

Back and Forth

“We left the Bahamas again and went to Pakistan, Nepal, Africa, and India, living worldly lives. By now we were both searching, but God seemed so elusive. Then when we moved back to the Bahamas in 2002, I decided it was time to get serious about where I would be spending eternity. My ninety-eight-year-old mother died, and I really wanted to see her again someday, so I decided to attend her church. I knew in my heart that Saturday was the true Sabbath, but I didn’t think I could keep it because it was such a big shopping day!

“I also tried to quit smoking and drinking, but it was impossible. I would throw away a pack in the morning, and by evening I’d be buying another one! It was degrading! I was a strong woman and very health-conscious. Why couldn’t I give it up? I cried to the Lord so many times to help me, but He seemed to stay silent.”

A few weeks after her mother’s death, Judy had a series of vivid dreams about God’s Judgment Day. “I knew He was trying to change my heart, so when an evangelistic series came up, I attended every day for two weeks,” she says. “I was in full battle for my life night after night as the speaker made altar calls. I felt the Holy Spirit pulling me, but I resisted.

“Then, just before the meetings were over, I was on my knees praying for strength to give my heart to Jesus when suddenly those awful dreams flashed before my eyes.

“As I struggled, the pastor who had come to our home several times knelt down beside me and whispered, ‘Sister Judy, don’t grieve away the Holy Spirit. Have courage, sister!’ I am sure the Holy Spirit guided him to my side, since I was among hundreds of people.”

“I got up—and  immediately felt as if heavy chains fell away from me! A few days later I was baptized on Sabbath in the beautifully warm Nassau ocean. From that moment on, I had no desire for wine and cigarettes. I was free! 

“When I surrendered my cherished sins, God took them from me!

“Psalm 66:18 says, ‘If I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear.’ But I praise God for Jesus’ promise in John 8:36: ‘If the Son makes you free, you shall be free indeed.’ Glory to God!”

Another Victory

By now Judy had been watching 3ABN regularly, and says that Colin’s heart was stirred by the Prophecy Code series with Pastor Doug Batchelor. “It was a three-week series, and I wondered how I’d get him to watch that long,” she admits. “But a week or so before the series began, he came in while Doug was telling his story about how he lived in a cave. He stood and watched for a long time, then sat down and watched it to the end. I knew the Holy Spirit was preparing the way!”

Although he’d shown some interest in the Bible when he was young, Colin had been sidetracked during his university years. But after three weeks with Doug Batchelor, his heart was stirred. He was especially interested in the Proverbs, because the wisdom it contained blended well with his business of arbitration and adjudication.

In 2005, Colin’s business took them to Sri Lanka, where they attended an Adventist church in Colombo. He also watched House Calls on 3ABN, and had many questions answered. “But Colin was a hard nut to crack!” Judy says. “If you look up stubborn in the dictionary, you just might see his face!”

Next, they moved to Georgia in 2008 and found a wonderful church in Canton, outside of Atlanta, where Judy says “a very seasoned English elder and a South African pastor took Colin under their wings and fast forwarded him in deep Bible study. He soaked it up like a sponge, and in a few months he was baptized on my birthday! It was the best birthday present ever!

“Years before, when I suggested tithing, Colin would look at me as if I was barking mad, and said we worked too hard to give away what little profit we made. But now he was ready, and God was true to His promise by blessing us more than we could ever have expected!”

Colin takes every opportunity to share the gospel, especially through his work abroad, settling construction disputes. “It’s amazing that people are so ready to talk about Jesus and the Bible in places like Ethiopia and Eastern Europe,” Judy says. “It gives him much encouragement to do the same back here in the U.K.—even if he draws a blank now and then!

“We both thank God for my mother’s prayers. They reached both of us—even after her death! We pray for our four kids and twelve grandkids, confident that one day they’ll know Jesus like we do! We also thank God for 3ABN and all the pure Bible truth over the years, and we’re thankful we have you here by satellite, since we have no Adventist church nearby! However, we are planning to start a Bible study group, so please pray for us!

“When I look back on how God put us together and how He kept His loving hand on us, I’m in total awe of His long-suffering and deep love for His children!”

By Bobby Davis

The Joy of Discovery – Lou and Melu Ginnetti

Lou and Melu Gennetti

Lou Ginnetti was born and raised in Joliet, Illinois, and says he thought he’d grown up in a normal home. “We were raised Catholics,” he begins, “but we weren’t very good ones. And as I look back on my childhood, I can’t say my childhood was very normal, either. You see, my dad was a professional gambler until he started losing, and then he began working at the racetrack. Growing up I wanted to be just like him. Until the day he died he was my best friend.

“I remember attending a Catholic retreat in high school once and organizing a poker game. My friends told me that I was hopelessly addicted to gambling, and that I’d never let it go. At the age of fifteen, I was working at a racetrack in Chicago as a groom and stable boy, and living on the backstretch. I think it’s fair to say I grew up very fast.”

A Spiritual Journey

Wherever his early years might have led him, Lou is quick to say that he was blessed when he met the woman who would become his wife. “Melu was born and raised in Nicaragua,” he explains, “and we were introduced by her brother-in-law, who was a customer of mine (and later became an evangelical preacher).

Lou and MeluA few weeks after she arrived in the States, he called and said, ‘Lou, how would you like to meet my sister-in-law from Nicaragua?’ and then handed her the phone! It was a bit awkward for a minute, but when we met it was love at first sight! One year later we were both saved and came to the Lord through his ministry. ”

Although Melu was raised as a devout Catholic, Lou says they joined a non-denominational church and became very active. “We were on fire for the Lord, and our first two children were raised in church,” he says. “But then we became lukewarm, and although we took our third child to church with us, she never showed much of an interest.

“Twenty-five years ago we moved to Michigan and stayed in the same church for sixteen years, but just warming the pews. Then we joined another church that led us to study the Bible, but four years later there were problems there, and we actively began looking for a church again.

“That was a tough time for us,” Lou admits, “because no matter where we went we just felt disappointed. Worship was more like a rock concert, and the sermons contained as much Scripture as a motivational speech.

“Finally, my wife said, ‘Why don’t we just have church at home? There’s nothing here, so maybe you can read a parable, and then we can pray and have church that way.’ ”

Searching

His desire to learn more truth led Lou to start scanning the cable television channels. “We had nine Christian channels, and the first three were Mormon, Catholic, and this other station where people seemed to read the Bible. But I had no idea what it was. It had a funny name with numbers and letters—you know, 3ABN!

“It’s interesting that about a month before I found 3ABN, I finally met face-to-face with Donna, a customer service representative from my Georgia-based employer. My wife and I were visiting the carpet mill I represented, and somehow I had found out she was a Seventh-day Adventist. So I asked Donna what that meant, and she said, ‘It means that I’m a Sabbath-keeping Christian,’ but I didn’t pursue that conversation.

“We also had six evangelical channels—each preaching the ‘Prosperity Gospel’ that God wants all of us to be wealthy. But that didn’t seem to make much sense, so I found myself turning to that 3ABN channel more often. Each sermon was totally Bible-based, and that just blew my mind. Then I realized that these were Seventh-day Adventists, but I still didn’t know who they were or what they believed.”

Next, Lou decided to do some research about Seventh-day Adventist beliefs online, but what he found was a lot of misinformation. “I kept thinking, This doesn’t match up with what I’m hearing on 3ABN, and after a while I got so confused that I decided to just stick with the evangelical stations.

“But something kept bringing me back to ‘that channel,’ so I decided to catch the 3ABN preachers in their deceptions! I watched for hours, and the topics were amazing. I kept waiting for them to drop the ball and reveal their true colors, but the truth they were preaching was too good. Then I remembered my co-worker, Donna, so I called her at work. She was well prepared, and patiently and thoroughly answered my questions.

David Asscherick
Melu met an Adventist friend at her job who  just “happened” to have a DVD series by David Asscherick in her car. “We watched them all in a ten-day period,” Melu says.

“About that time, Melu met another Adventist at her job at a health store. Kim just happened to have every DVD of David Asscherick’s Discover Prophecy series in her car, and we watched them all over a ten-day period.

“Finally, one Friday night, I called the South Lyon New Beginnings Seventh-day Adventist Church and told them I had some questions. The pastor invited me to come visit, so the next day Melu and I attended our first Sabbath service. It was a real eye-opener! We kept looking at each other, whispering, ‘This is not what we’ve read on the Internet!’

“The next day we visited a Sunday worship service. The drums and music started up, the lights started flickering, and it didn’t seem very worshipful at all. Then, when a girl in jeans walked down the aisle drinking her coffee, I turned to Melu and said, “I don’t know about you, but it looks like I’m a Seventh-day Adventist!”

A Decision

“Our decision to be baptized was easy. The solid biblical truths, based upon the full counsel of Scripture, cleared up all misconceptions of God’s character, His will for our lives, and the manner of His soon return. We studied the fundamental doctrines with Pastor Jim Howard, and five months later, on August 21, 2011, Melu and I were baptized and joined the church! I’d been baptized before as an evangelical, knowing Jesus as my Savior,” Lou says. “Back then I only knew Him as Someone who understands and forgives me, but now I know Him as my Lord!” 

Lou says that his children at first might have thought that he had become Jewish because he now worshiped on Sabbath. “My two older children had strong Christian foundations. However, since we didn’t teach her properly, our youngest had never expressed interest in religion. When I told her we were joining the Seventh-day Adventist Church, she asked me about it, then out of the blue she brought up some ugly things that had been in the news that day and asked, ‘Dad, what’s going on in this world?’

“That gave me the chance to share about the battle raging between good and evil, and as we spoke, I saw the Holy Spirit in action! Night after night she kept asking me questions until midnight, and in November 2013, she was baptized, too!”

Today, Melu serves as a deaconess and Lou was recently ordained as an elder!

Pastor Jim Howard is delighted. “Lou and Melu are really special people,” he says. “They’re genuine, dedicated, and much more doctrinally grounded than most members who have only been in the church for a couple of years. I believe this is because of watching 3ABN, and I’m happy to say that they’ve been actively involved in every aspect of church outreach, and are a real blessing to our church family!”

Brothers and Sisters

When we spoke to Lou he had just returned from his first ASI Laymen’s Convention. “I met so many people I’d seen on 3ABN!” he exclaims.  “They’re real people, and the arrogance of the typical TV evangelist just wasn’t there. They are truly my brothers and sisters in Christ, and I am closer to my Adventist family than I am to most of my relatives!  I’m so grateful 3ABN was there when I was searching for more truth. Joining the Adventist family has been one of my greatest joys!”

 


 Visit the South Lyon Seventh-day Adventist Church

South Lyon Seventh-day Adventist Church
If you’re in the area, why not join Lou and Melu for worship on Sabbath? They’d love to meet you at the South Lyon Seventh-day Adventist Church (meeting in the Family Life Community Church), 62345 West Eight Mile Road, in South Lyon, Michigan.

By Bobby Davis

A Cabin in the Woods – Paul Hollis

Paul Hollis

After many years of work at a steel company, Paul Hollis felt something was missing. “I was making $130,000 a year, but I wasn’t happy with anything in life,” he says. “No matter what I had, I just wasn’t satisfied.

“So I discussed it all with my wife, and finally I just told her I wanted to quit my job, because it was turning me into something I didn’t want to be. In fact, I told her that I really wanted go live in our cabin up in the Arkansas mountains for a while.”

 

 

Log Cabin
Paul decided he just wanted to live in a cabin up in the mountains in Arkansas, so he did.

Most of us may have wished something similar at some point of our lives, but Paul took action. “I just needed to get myself back, so we decided I’d go up there, and my wife would come up on weekends.

“I spent a year and a half up there, living a simple life in a cabin that doesn’t even have electricity. But that’s where I found God!”

Losing His Way

Paul was born and raised in southern Arkansas. “My mom was 15 and my daddy was 17 when I was born,” he explains. “They couldn’t take care of me very well, so when I was eight, my grandparents finally adopted me. They were good people. They took me to church on Sunday and really believed all that they knew.

“My grandmother meant the world to me, so when she died, it took a lot out of me. She was the one who always kept me on the straight and narrow,” he continues, “so after she passed away, I started straying. A year later, when I was 17, I joined the Marine Corps, and I never did come to God.”

Paul was married at 18 but says that marriage didn’t turn out well. His second wife refused to move after he got a job at a steel mill three-and-a-half hours away.

“Being away from her all week was hard on our marriage,” he says, “and it wasn’t long before we drifted apart. But all that’s over with now. Today I have a wonderful wife, and we both think constantly of each other, and how we can please.”

A Traumatic Event

So how did Paul find God, and what brought it about?

“I can hardly talk about it without getting emotional,” he begins. “I had some goats up at the cabin, and the momma goat was fixin’ to have some little ones when I left one day. When I got back, she was almost dead from trying to have the babies. I didn’t know what to do, so I rushed to the vet about 20 minutes away. When I got back I delivered the first baby, but it looked like it was dead, so I laid it down on the grass next to the mother. Then, a few minutes later, the next baby was coming and it was breech, so I rushed back to the vet, again! When I got back and finally got it turned around, but it seemed dead, as well. By now the momma goat was so worn out that I thought all three of them were gonna die.

Baby Goat
Paul panicked as the mother goat struggled to give birth to her babies.

“That broke my heart, but all of a sudden, the little ones started to come to, and before long they got up and started trying to walk!

“Something hit me right then, and it had nothing to do with the goats. I was convinced that this miracle was all about God! Overwhelmed, I laid down on the ground and cried for the longest time!”

Hungry for Truth

“After that powerful experience, I decided I needed to learn about God, so I began to study the Bible, and sometimes I would read for 14 hours a day!” Paul says.

“One of the things I noticed right away was that the Bible said we should keep the Sabbath day holy. I knew that, but I never knew that the Sabbath was on Saturday!

“I kept studying, and one day my son came up and stayed with me. He had become a Seventh-day Adventist, so he confirmed that Saturday really was the Sabbath.

“Then I asked a friend who owned a car dealership one day if he knew about the Sabbath, and he said, ‘Yes, I do. I’m a Seventh-day Adventist. Haven’t you noticed I don’t open for business on Saturday?’

“That blew my mind! But there was more!”

Paul explains that about a year ago he began working for a farmer in Arkansas doing maintenance and general farm work. But although he explained he didn’t want to work on Saturdays, he caved in and did several times, anyway.

“I felt so badly, though, that one day I flagged him over, and explained that I absolutely wouldn’t do it again, and that if he wanted to, he could fire me on the spot. But he said he’d think about it, and later he told me he wouldn’t ask me to work on Saturdays anymore.”

Paul’s faith and conviction continued to grow, and one day he discovered that the TV in the trailer he was staying in picked up five 3ABN channels from our Memphis station.

“I hadn’t started going to church yet because I wanted to learn from the Bible, and not from any man; but I really liked what I was hearing on 3ABN Proclaim!” he says.

“So I watched 3ABN Proclaim! 99 percent of the time, but once in a while I’d switch over to 3ABN Radio. Then, one day, I left 3ABN Radio on and went to work. And when I walked in that evening I heard a preacher tellin’ us how to quit chewing tobacco! ‘We have a Five-Day Stop Smoking program,’ he said, ‘or you can do it as a Christian should, and just let God do it for you!’

“Wow! I was 51 years old and I’d chewed tobacco since I was eight. My wife had begged and cried, and I’d tried to quit many times, but it had never worked. I even prayed to God for strength, but I had always tried to do it for my wife, or for me. I’d never wanted to do it for Him! Suddenly I realized, I’ve been asking God to help me do this, but haven’t used my faith! So I immediately threw my tobacco in the trash, looked up, and said, ‘God, I’m giving this to you, because I can’t defeat it! I’m done!’”

After a long pause, Paul continues, “I’ll get a hankering once in a while, especially after I eat. But I’m not fighting this. I’m done with it. God has done the impossible ever since I put my faith in Him. And He did it immediately—it didn’t take weeks or months!”

Baptism

Paul’s desire to worship with fellow believers kept growing, and one day he found the Dyersburg, Tennessee Seventh-day Adventist Church, just a few miles away!

“When I arrived I told them that I wanted to be baptized, but unfortunately, they were between pastors, so I kept waiting.

“Then I met Marianne Krueger, the daughter of 3ABN president, Jim Gilley, and last Sabbath she called him to explain my situation.”

Paul Hollis Baptism
Paul was baptized by Pastor Ron Halvorsen, Sr.

Pastor Gilley invited Paul to come up that very day, and then asked Pastor Ron Halvorsen, Sr., who was holding our Anchors of Truth series that weekend, to baptize Paul that evening. “It was a beautiful and touching baptism,” Jim says, “and we were happy to welcome our new brother in Christ into the family. I’m delighted that this ministry helped solidify his decision to be baptized!”

C. A. Murray, general manager for 3ABN Proclaim! says, “We’re thrilled that Paul is a devoted viewer of 3ABN Proclaim! He’s part of a large group of people who mostly watch our preaching channel, and we’re so pleased that it’s reaching so many with the gospel!”

Eager to Serve

“God has helped me so much,” Paul says, “and today there’s nothing I own that has any value to me, other than God. And I don’t desire anything that I can’t walk away from.

“I tell people that I’d rather live in a ditch inside a cardboard box and spend eternity in Heaven, than be rich and only live 80 years on this earth. All I long to do is what Jesus wants me to.

“Everyone thought I was crazy when I walked away from my job, but God was driving me into those mountains.

“All that time to think got me close to God and away from the world—and that did it. If I hadn’t been up there by myself, I might never have found Him. So I believe God put me there, and each day I ask him, ‘Just tell me where You want me to be.’”


Visit the Dyersburg Seventh-day Adventist Church

Dyersburg Seventh-day Adventist Church
If you’re in the Dyersburg area, why not come worship with your brothers and sisters at the Seventh-day Adventist Church located at 2355 Henry Street in
Dyersburg, Tennessee. They’d love to meet you!

Dyersburg Seventh-day Adventist Church Website

By Bobby Davis

Mother’s Channel – Maria Teresa Flores Morales

The Morales family interview

By Idalia Dinzey

We love to hear how 3ABN Latino has impacted our viewer’s lives and I’m often moved to tears when I hear how the Lord has brought about a change of heart through His transforming power. I feel so energized and encouraged that I just want to say a big, Praise the Lord! 

Here’s a beautiful testimony from one of our viewers in Nuevo León, Mexico, which made me smile. In fact, parts of it made me laugh out loud!

3ABN Latino was invited to take part in a special event held in Mexico City, Mexico, that encouraged people in that huge city to embrace a healthier lifestyle. God really blessed, and we were able to assemble a set where we could interview people who have come into the Seventh-day Adventist Church because of 3ABN Latino programming on the hundreds of cable companies in Mexico!

A “Different” Channel

María Teresa Flores Morales, a wife and blessed mother of three daughters, was flipping through the channels on her television one day when she suddenly found a “different” Christian channel—3ABN Latino.

What is this? she wondered. Who are these people? And what are they talking about?

Because she takes care of her grandchildren, she says that when she discovered 3ABN Latino she’d only spend a few hours at a time watching our programs. “But I made my grandchildren watch the children’s programming,” she admits, “because, after all, 3ABN Latino has something for everyone.”

Maria Teresa Flores Morales
Maria Teresa come across 3ABN Latino one day, and found she could not pull herself away—much to the annoyance of her daughters, who wondered if she’s lost her mind!

When her daughters would come to pick up their children after work, they soon noticed that their mother wouldn’t leave her bedroom to say hello or goodbye. Instead, she’d just sit there watching 3ABN Latino intently, with her Bible in her hands!

“Dad, I don’t think Mom’s feeling well,” one of her daughters commented one day. “I think there’s something wrong with her! How can we get her to stop watching that channel and get out of her room?” However, nothing they said could pry her away from her television.

I asked María Teresa what kept her glued to 3ABN Latino, and she answered, “I was enthralled because I was hearing and learning many things I’d never known—and it was all in the Bible! But what impacted me the most was that I never knew the Sabbath was part of the Ten Commandments. I honestly didn’t know! How can it be part of the Ten Commandments? I asked myself. And how is our relationship with God?

“I continued watching and giving God thanks because I was growing in Bible knowledge. I watched all the programs, and all the pastors—including you and your husband John,” she says. “And then I began watching Respuestas Bíblicas [3ABN Latino’s Spanish version of House Calls/Bible Answers]. I had so many questions, but I never bothered to send them in because someone else would beat me to it every time, and I’d get the information I needed to know! It felt like that program was custom made just for me!”

A Frustrated Family

When asked how often she watched 3ABN Latino, María Teresa admits her family got pretty frustrated with her.

“They actually got mad at me for watching that channel so much,” she says. “But I kept telling my husband that it was beautiful, and that they taught the Word of God and presented the truth.”

Her daughter Miriam says, “I was surprised by Mom’s comments, and they actually touched my heart because we were practicing a religion that didn’t explain a lot of biblical things. So I started getting interested, as well. I kept reading the Bible even though I didn’t understand a lot of things, and Mom kept explaining them to me.”

Another daughter, María, says, “Mom surprised us by watching 3ABN Latino all the time! We had a tradition of getting together every weekend for family gatherings and meals, but she was always so engrossed in watching 3ABN Latino. It frustrated me, but one day Mom said, ‘Honey, just listen to this man, Pastor Andres Portes. Listen to what he is saying.’ So I stopped and listened, and to tell you the truth, I felt something nice inside. He spoke so nicely that I felt it was getting somewhere within me; but I still held back and sarcastically asked my mother, ‘So are you going to become one of the sisters? It’s best for me to leave your house!’

“Months went by, and Mom continued watching 3ABN Latino. I told my father, ‘Mom is sick! There’s something wrong with her!’ But because of her sweet spirit, before you knew it, we began to see that there was something wrong with us!

An Invitation?

The first time María Teresa visited a Seventh-day Adventist church was a memorable occasion. Her husband dropped her off at the church and said he’d be back to pick her up, but as she approached the door she hesitated.

“May I come in?” she asked.

“Of course!” the greeter replied as they offered her a Visitor Pin so others might welcome her, too.

Many people did welcome her, and several asked who had invited her to church that day.

“Oh, I didn’t know I needed an invitation,” she stammered. “I don’t know anyone here!”

Thankfully, a lady who overheard this conversation exclaimed, “The Holy Spirit invited her! That’s why she’s here!”

That made María Teresa feel special, and she proceeded to tell them all how the Holy Spirit had been working on her heart while she watched 3ABN Latino.

Then she surprised them all with a question:

“I’d like to get baptized. How do I go about it?”

Run and Hide

María Teresa was delighted when a couple from church began visiting her home to have Bible studies. She invited her daughters and their spouses, but every time the church members would pull into the driveway, everyone would run and hide! Even little Daniel would pretend to be asleep!

Maria Teresa and her daughters baptized
Pastor Elias Reyes Rivera beams as he prepares to baptize María Teresa, and her daughters María and Elizabeth. Several other family members are studying and preparing for baptism, as well.

But finally, they were each impressed to join in, and today all but one of her daughters are baptized members, along with some of their husbands!

(And in case you’re wondering about the others, well, I’m happy to tell you that they’re studying to be baptized, too!)

“I’m so thankful that the Lord brought this channel to my family,” María says. “It’s a great blessing that Mom found it, and that she shared it with the family. We are here now thanks to what happened with Mom by finding the channel, by learning about God. ”

Daniel says he loves to go to the church because he’s learning about Jesus. “I’m learning that He has a lot of love for me,” he explains. “I want to be in Heaven with Him!”

I still laugh when I picture those family members running to hide, but I praise God that today her family stands undivided, serving our Lord!

Won’t you continue to pray for 3ABN Latino? Because of you, we can reach much farther than our minds can comprehend.

Thank you for your sacrificial giving! You have truly been missionaries in many countries without paying a penny for a passport or an airplane ticket. Your investment in 3ABN Latino enables us to preach the gospel both here at home and around the world!

By Bobby Davis

Never Give Up – Richard Wise

Behind Bars

By Moses Primo, Jr.

Richard Wise, the grandson of a Baptist minister, was preaching and teaching Sunday school in the Chillicothe Correctional Institution—as an inmate! While confined, he was very involved in the church program led by the two prison chaplains, but in 1980, a slot opened up in the Sunday service rotation, and it was offered to the local Seventh-day Adventists who had long and consistently ministered there.

The Allegheny West Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, under the direction of Ernestine Mitchell, immediately coordinated volunteer church members from four congregations to visit and hold a full church service in their chapel once a month.

“I decided I would correct the Adventists on their misunderstanding of the holiness of Saturday,” Richard says, “but after completing their Bible studies, I was convinced about the Sabbath, and was baptized!”

Richard took his faith seriously, and soon was ordained as an elder. He also actively led out in unsanctioned Sabbath worship services on the prison grounds until prison officials relented and allowed Sabbath services in their chapel.

Richard and Christine Wise
Richard and Christine Wise have seen hundreds of prisoners baptized through their work with prison ministries. Their goal is to make 3ABN available to every prisoner in Ohio!

Enter Christine Cochran, who joined the local volunteers at the Chillicothe facility in January 1989. Having a strong burden for prison ministry, she mailed articles and ministry materials, some of which she acquired from 3ABN, to any inmate who would receive them.

Later that year, while still serving time, Richard married Christine, and confidently says, “The only two experiences I would insist on reliving would be learning this Bible truth, and meeting my wife!”

Persistence

Being as ministry-minded as Richard was, he wasted no time. By the end of that year, he had learned a lot about 3ABN, and began petitioning the prison to carry it. But try as he might, the answer was always no.

When he was transferred across the street to the Ross Correctional Institute in 1997, he once again started a church, developed a prison ministry with Adventist volunteers, and petitioned to add 3ABN to their channel lineup. But although the church and ministry flourished, the answer regarding 3ABN was always no.

Richard was transferred again in 2002, this time to the London Correctional Institution, in London, Ohio. Once again he made efforts to start a church, a community-led prison ministry, and have 3ABN brought in, but this time the officials said no to all three—every time he asked.

Disappointed, but determined, Richard didn’t give up. “My efforts in London failed,” he says, “but I still held Bible studies with six or eight inmates the entire time I was there.”

Christine was also putting effort into promoting 3ABN by videotaping 3ABN programs and starting a lending library in her church. Then she attended 3ABN’s camp meeting and picked up fliers and door hangers to help get 3ABN added to the local cable companies. “If I could get 3ABN added, the inmates in the prisons would have access to their programming through local cable,” she explains. But despite her best efforts, the doors remained closed.

On August 18, 2004, Richard was released on parole. Finally he could share a prison ministry with Christine so he immediately applied to volunteer at the Chillicothe Correctional Institution.

“I received a letter that basically said I’d never be allowed, but I could apply again next year,” he says, “so I did. Every year. Again and again—and every year I was denied.”

Try Again

By now you must know that Richard and Christine didn’t stop there, but went into other prisons in the area, instead. He did, however, enter Chillicothe to visit a fellow inmate named Alex, whom he and Christine had “adopted” as their own son.

“Alex was a Muslim, but Christine would give him Bible studies while I was serving time in another facility,” Richard says. “He was baptized, and when I came out of prison we visited him together. Then one day last summer Alex asked if I would try once more to get 3ABN into his prison.

“Honestly, after trying for so many years, I’ll admit that I didn’t think it would work. But for Alex’ sake, I decided to try again.”

This time Richard decided to call Glorystar, a satellite dish company that includes 3ABN in its receiver. He spoke with Brian Gohl, who kindly shared the lengthy and challenging process they go through to install new channels in a prison.

Fighting back discouragement, Richard decided to try anyway, so Brian gave him the name of a lady who had succeeded in getting new channels added to the Chillicothe facility.

Another man he spoke with was a Christian staff member who worked at Chillicothe and with whom he had built a friendship over the years. He agreed it would be nice to have 3ABN, but explained that 3ABN would need to obtain permission to share the existing equipment.

These were new obstacles, but Richard felt as though he was moving forward—especially after speaking with 3ABN’s Jennifer Todd, who confirmed we would be happy to provide technical support. Jennifer sent the prison a portfolio introducing 3ABN and followed up with a call.

Finally, only one obstacle remained: obtaining permission to share equipment. But no one knew how to contact the equipment owners.

Richard called the lady who had gotten the other channels into the prison, and she was very kind. She explained how she had facilitated the signing of the contract and then, to Richard’s surprise, she gave him the contact number for the equipment owner!

Richard called and shared his testimony over the phone, and the man’s heart was touched. Finally, four months after promising Alex he’d try again, the last hurdle had been cleared, and in October 2013, the inmates found 3ABN, 3ABN Latino, Dare to Dream, and 3ABN Proclaim! added to their TV lineup. Almost 3,000 inmates now have access to these life-changing messages—including over 100 death row inmates!

“Since last fall we’ve baptized twelve inmates, and we have six more studying for baptism,” Richard exclaims. “Our church services have grown from around sixty inmates to about ninety. Many of them are Hispanic, and they ask for 3ABN materials in Spanish so they can read and share them with other inmates. You cannot imagine how much these inmates value 3ABN!”

Never Give Up

Since 1986, Richard has led over 300 inmates to baptism, but he and Christine are still going strong. “We are now going back to all those prisons that told us no, and we’re trying again,” he says.

“The Seventh-day Adventist mission, which was started in March 1986, is still going strong 28 years later under the nurturing care of Melvin and Ernestine Mitchell. And now that 3ABN is a vital part of this ministry, more and more inmates will come to know this truth, and Jesus can come soon!”

How do you use 3ABN in your local outreach? We’d love to hear from you, so please call us at 618-627-4651 extension 3120 and ask for our marketing executive, Jennifer Todd. Let’s pray together and see where the Lord leads us. God is eager to reach His children with a message of hope and salvation, and He chooses to use us to accomplish this. We can never give up!

By Bobby Davis

A Committed Life – Chris Lane

Chris Lane

There’s nothing more powerful than the testimony of someone whose life was spared and transformed by the power of Jesus Christ, and that’s certainly true for Chris Lane!

“My parents were divorced when I was just four years old,” he begins, “and ours was a non-Christian home where we never read the Bible, and we never talked about God.

“It was hard to make friends because we moved around a lot,” Chris continues, “so I started playing sports—and that’s where I found acceptance. But when a friend showed me the drug stash he’d found in the basement, I quickly discovered they would solve all my problems! I used drugs every chance I could, because I was always looking for that good feeling where my mind was clouded and I didn’t have to deal with the reality of my bad life.”

Hitting Bottom

Chris continued using drugs until depression finally caused him to drop out of school. “My mother had kicked me out when I was 13, so I lived with my grandmother for a while. But when that didn’t work out, I began living with friends for a month at a time,” he says. “I enrolled myself in high school and managed to get by for a year. But it was too hard to use drugs and go to school, so I finally dropped out and began selling drugs, instead.”

As his world crashed, Chris finally turned to a friend in desperation. “What should I do with my life?” he asked, and his friend answered,  “Why don’t you read your Bible for ten minutes every night?”

“I honestly tried,” Chris says, “but my brain was so fried I couldn’t focus for more than five minutes! Someone told me the Old Testament had been done away with, so I began reading the gospels. When I got to Matthew 7:7 I read, ‘Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you.’ So I begged God for another chance.

“‘I’ll do what You want me to do!’ I promised—and I instantly knew Someone had heard me and answered me, because I was completely delivered from drugs that day! Immediately the Holy Spirit began showing me the things I was doing wrong, and I had no more desire to do evil!”

Through a series of miracles, Chris was given a place to stay and enrolled in a Christian university. Then he met a young man from Spain who invited him to visit in the summer. “I met his father, who worked across the border in Morocco,” Chris says. “He risked his life every time he talked about Jesus or the Bible, and after that, the Holy Spirit began impressing me every time I prayed that if I wanted to be a Christian, I’d have to do the same! Sometimes I’d go for weeks without praying because I just couldn’t get that thought out of my head!

“Finally, I broke down and said, Okay, Lord, I’ll go anywhere. I don’t care how dangerous or disgusting—I’ll do it! It was a frightened prayer, but it was the prayer He wanted!”

Mexico

Soon Chris found that a non-denominational school in Nava, Mexico, needed a physical education teacher, so he went for a summer, expecting to learn Spanish first. “As soon as I arrived, though, I realized no one spoke English, and that they expected me to start teaching immediately! It was sink or swim, but I managed; and by the time I was supposed to return to the States, I knew this was the life God intended for me.”

Questions—and Answers!

Despite loving his job, Chris was distressed about how things were being managed, and several months later, he returned to his grandmother’s home in Tennessee.

“Then one day I turned on her TV and saw someone preaching on 3ABN, a channel I’d never seen before,” Chris says. “But this guy wasn’t talking all crazy like the people I was used to. He was backing up everything he said with Scripture! So I’d write down all the verses in the morning, study them all day, then watch the repeat at night. Soon I was convicted about the seventh-day Sabbath! And here’s the strange thing,” he adds. “My grandmother was the only one who could pick up 3ABN!” (We’ve heard this before!)

Chris found the friendly Maryville Seventh-day Adventist Church, and a month later, joined it by profession of faith! Excited by new truths, he couldn’t wait to tell his friends in Mexico and soon was back there again, trying to study the Bible with anyone who would sit still long enough!

“There was a huge need for Bibles, so I prayed for God to send us some, then e-mailed my pastor back in the States,” he says. “But when he wrote back saying someone had just walked into the church and donated 1,000 Bibles for Mexico, it blew my mind! That was definitely the Lord!”

Chris began distributing the Bibles immediately, but his excitement about the Sabbath was not shared by the school leaders, who followed him around, telling the people not to listen to him.

Facing an uphill battle, Chris returned to the States and enrolled in a school of evangelism where an anonymous donor helped pay for his studies.The next summer he mentored young people who were learning to conduct evangelistic meetings. Finally, he received a call to be a Bible worker in Wenatchee, Washington, and the next day Chris was flying out west!

“Despite some people’s doubts, the Lord blessed there, too,” Chris says. “I was able to give hundreds of Bible studies in 70 different homes—65 of which didn’t have a Bible—and we gave away hundreds of Bibles, and thousands of books! That just proved to me that the Lord will bless if we show up.”

New Mission Adventure

Currently, Chris works as a missionary to Bangkok, Thailand, a city of 12 million souls—and only 1,200 Seventh-day Adventists. He’s learning the Thai language, teaching English, and making trips daily into the unentered areas of that city.

Chris and Children
Chris enjoys teaching both children and adults English. “I decided to use the Bible as my textbook,” he says, adding that he does his best, and lets the Holy Spirit do the rest. (Photo: Josh Bauder)

In his typical manner, he is upbeat about this new experience. “I’ve been handing out basic Christian literature to taxi and motorcycle taxi drivers,” he says. “A previous missionary painted a mural of the Second Coming of Jesus on the side of a building, so I get a taxi to that mural, give them some literature, and point to the painting. I think I have shown it to all the taxi drivers in my area!” he adds with a laugh.

A mural painted by a previous missionary depicts the Second Coming of Jesus Christ, and Chris often stands by it giving out literature. (Photo: Chris Lane)

“I’ve also decided to use the Bible as our textbook in my English classes. The other day we studied salvation, and since I know so little Thai, I tried to explain everything by drawing pictures on the board. When I drew a picture of Jesus being crucified, it really touched the people in my class and they started crying! The mercy of God was revealed to four new Buddhist souls, so I asked them if they wanted to accept Jesus’ free gift of salvation—and two of them did! We knelt together and asked Jesus to forgive us. I’m not exactly sure how much they understood, but I did my best, and I know the Holy Spirit will do the rest.”

Because of the the prayers and financial gifts of our supporters, 3ABN was there when Chris was desperately searching for answers. His heart eagerly embraced the Bible truths, and he immediately responded to the call of the Holy Spirit. We know the Lord will continue to bless Chris, and all those who join us in proclaiming the three angels’ messages of Revelation 14 to a lost and dying world!