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

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

Jennifer’s Journey – Jennifer Munka

Jennifer Munka

By Daniela Weichold

I was attending the 2005 General Conference Session of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in St. Louis, Missouri, and since I had only recently obtained satellite TV at my home in Belgium, I was very happy I had the opportunity to briefly talk to Danny Shelton about 3ABN. I remember telling him, “I’m one of the few viewers in Belgium,” but at that point I didn’t really know the implications of my statement!

About a year later I took a leave of absence from my work, and spent the next three years in the United States taking medical-missionary training. After returning to my adopted home country of Belgium, I appreciated being able to watch 3ABN again, as it enhanced my spiritual life. Although I attended the International Seventh-day Adventist Church in Brussels, this American TV network was not so well known among our members.

The Call

It was on a Friday afternoon some time in 2011 when I received a phone call from a lady named Jennifer Munka. She inquired the whereabouts of our church, and when I asked her how she knew about us, she told me that she had been watching 3ABN. Wow! I thought, I’m not the only one, and very soon after, Jennifer was welcomed into our midst.

Jennifer was born and raised in the African country of Kenya. She grew up in a Christian home, but her grandmother was actually who introduced her to Jesus Christ. She was baptized at age 14, and four years later, her family moved to the United States. While she attended school in Florida, she met her Kenyan husband, who was a year ahead of her in school. They married and returned to Africa as missionaries to Nigeria.

Jennifer stayed very busy taking care of their three children and working as a secretary for the middle-east churches, but she had a lot of questions. She wondered why the church talked about the Sabbath, but didn’t keep it. She also had questions about baptism—why didn’t they follow the biblical way? The answers she got from her bishop never satisfied her.

Finding Her Way

When Jennifer’s husband had the opportunity to work in Belgium, they moved their family to Europe—and that’s where she began watching 3ABN!

Soon she was a regular online viewer, not realizing there was actually an English-speaking Seventh-day Adventist church in Brussels. Then one day she searched for a church and found a Facebook link for our International Seventh-day Adventist Church. My phone number was listed as the contact, so I received her call.

This wonderful lady immediately became part of our church family, and what impressed me immediately was the fact that she was so warmhearted and affectionate. In fact, I consider her to be one of the best huggers in our church!

Our first elder at the time, Lawrence Chilimboyi, had this to say: “I always want to greet people I’ve never met before at church, so I went up and introduced myself. At that time, Jennifer hadn’t told me how she came to know about our church, so I thought she might be one of those who had been in the church for some time, but had only recently decided to get baptized. However, when we spoke again some Sabbaths later, I realized from her speech that this was somebody who was very familiar and comfortable talking about her faith in God. She could also relate to Scripture in expressing her need for Him.

“Later on she told me how she had come across the Adventist message,” he continues, “and then she expressed her desire to get baptized the biblical way—by immersion. She was the most consistent person in our baptism class, and often the earliest. Most of the time she arrived at church before I did! Jennifer was very receptive to the teachings of the Bible, and we had wonderful discussions.

“Despite some challenges, she was baptized with several others last year. Jennifer is a wonderful addition to our church family, and a good demonstration of the power of God at work through human agents and institutions to save souls. I believe that, just as our Lord Jesus said, there are many like Jennifer who we don’t know of yet who will come into the church in these last days.”

No Barriers

Pastor Iwan Voerman was also quite impressed. “When someone like Jennifer is already acquainted with our teachings, it brings down the usual barriers to conversations. Their questions are directed to better understanding, instead of defending what they previously believed, and that results in confirming our teachings. In her case, it was like talking to a sister already in the faith.”

Baptismal Candidates
Jennifer (center) and the other baptismal candidates on their big day! “God has called me for something. He is a good God, and He is so merciful,” she says. (Photo: Joela Soma)

Finally, the day of her baptism approached, but the enemy of souls wasn’t very happy about it. All the baptismal candidates gathered at the church, but our sister from Kenya was missing! I called her cell phone as the baptisms began, and found out that the bus she was supposed to take was late! Oh no, Lord, I prayed. Please bring Jennifer to church on time! 

I was able to pick her up from the metro station, and Jennifer descended with the others into the watery grave of baptism, only to be resurrected to a new life in Jesus. It was a beautiful celebration!

When I asked her if she’d been worried that day about whether she’d make it to church on time, she said: “I wasn’t anxious. I know that the Lord wanted me to do it, and that He would accomplish it!”

As one speaks with Jennifer, it quickly becomes obvious that she’s very sure about her faith in God. “I want to fulfill His mission,” she says. “God has called me for something. He is a good God, and He is so merciful.”

I’m truly grateful to have a brand new sister in the faith who came to our church through such an interesting path. I can only marvel how God works in our lives in order to bring us into His fold!

By Bobby Davis

Beautiful Feet – Elie Martinez Duran

Carolyn and Ellie

By Carolyn Karlstrom

I’ll never forget that Sabbath morning I met Elie Martinez Duran. It was October 1, 2011, and after the service I was introduced to her and her youngest daughter Inari.

“Welcome!” I smiled as I greeted her. “Can you stay for lunch?”

Our friendship began over that potluck meal, and it deepened as we enjoyed fellowship and Bible studies together.

Elie and three of her siblings were left with their paternal grandmother when her parents moved from Mexico to Oregon. A devout Catholic, her grandmother took the children to church faithfully, and Elie loved it. She says she felt a deep spiritual yearning from an early age, but when she joined her family in the United States, she didn’t get to attend church anymore. However, she was determined to maintain her connection to the God she loved, so she continued to pray.

In 1993 her son James was born, and the following year she met Francisco (Frank) Duran, and together they had three girls, Kaylee, Neve, and Inari. Elie would occasionally attend church with them, but something didn’t feel right. For one thing, there were images—and her Bible said these were not acceptable to God.

Sometime in 1999 Elie began asking God to lead her to the right church, and although she tried many, none of them seemed to fit. For eight years she longed for a better understanding of Scripture, until one day she prayed, Lord, I know the answers are in the Bible, so please show me how to read it!

The very next day someone rang her doorbell. “Would you like to learn how to read the Bible?” they asked. Elie was delighted, and for nearly four years, her family worshiped with the Jehovah’s Witnesses.

Through studying her Bible, she became aware of the seventh-day Sabbath, but her new friends couldn’t seem to explain why she should keep Sunday holy.

There has to be one right church, Lord. Please help us! she begged.

Making Sense

When Elie’s family purchased a satellite dish, she found an unfamiliar station called 3ABN, and she never turned it off! “The first person I remember was David Down with Digging Up the Past,” she says, “and the information he shared was exactly what I’d been reading in Scripture!”

On September 24, 2011, Elie kept the Sabbath for the first time, singing, praying, and talking with her kids while watching 3ABN. The very next week she heard the words, Seventh-day Adventist for the first time—ever! “Praise the Lord!” she shouted! “Now I know what church we’ll be attending!”

Elie was thrilled when she was lowered into the baptismal waters, with her friend Carolyn Karlstrom by her side. She says that as Pastor Roger Walter baptized her, she could just imagine all the angels in Heaven rejoicing! (Photo: Rick Karlstrom)

Taking her youngest daughter with her, Elie attended her first Sabbath service; and, as God would have it, we celebrated Communion (yes, Communion!) that week.

“Did you understand what was happening?” I asked her after the service, and her answer surprised me.

“Yes,” she replied. “We were prepared by 3ABN!”

Getting Right to Work

Elie immediately began sharing everything we studied about. She sent her family books and DVDs, and I rounded up 17 Bibles to send to her friends and relatives. She visited family that lived close by, and studied with her children and their friends at home. She brought dozens of young people to church services, evangelistic series, seminars, and concerts—she even witnessed by e-mail and Facebook.

Ellie's Family
Today, ten members of the Duran, Becerra, and Martinez families have been baptized, and most of the others are studying the truths Elie discovered in the Bible! (Photo: David Becerra)

The results? Well, here’s what’s happened, so far! God’s church has welcomed in these new ones (listed by family groups) on these dates:

Elie Martinez Duran: August 24, 2012
Kaylee Duran (oldest daughter): December 24, 2011
Neve Duran (middle daughter): November 23, 2013
Inari Duran (youngest daughter): November 23, 2013
Lidia Martinez (Elie’s sister): April 6, 2013
Jacqueline Martinez (Lidia’s daughter): April 6, 2013
Ariel Martinez (Lidia’s son): April 6, 2013
Jennifer Martinez (Lidia’s youngest daughter): April 6, 2013
Homero Martinez (Lidia’s husband): April 22, 2013
Marisol Martinez Becerra (Elie’s sister): November 9, 2013
David Becerra (Marisol’s husband): November 9, 2013
Vanessa Rodriguez (Marisol’s daughter): November 9, 2013

Most of the other members of her family are studying, and Felipe Jimenez, a Bible worker from Walla Walla, Washington, has helped her greatly by studying with her parents, Alfonso and Gudelia. Another sister-in-law, Martha, was opposed at first, but now she’s studying, along with her son Zeth. Elie’s oldest sister Silvia is studying, her younger brother, Alfonso Jr., and his wife Elvira have some interest, and their three children are studying, as well.

A Struggle

Elie’s brother-in-law, Homero, grew angry when his wife and children began to show interest in spiritual things. “Elie,” he confided, “I feel that Satan is making me struggle against this, because I get so angry when Lidia prays. That’s not me!”

Leading him around the outside of his home, Elie asked God to drive out the evil spirits; and when his family was baptized, Homero was in church! Then, just two weeks later, Homero sprang to his feet during an altar call, and his conversion was so genuine that he was baptized on the spot! The moment was so shocking and powerful that several others decided to give their hearts to the Lord that day, too.

Rejoicing Angels

“As a pastor, it’s always heartwarming to see people come to Jesus and begin to put down their spiritual roots,” says our senior pastor, Roger Walter. “I had the privilege of baptizing Elie and her three daughters, and they got involved right away. They are solid in their commitment to God, invested in continual growth, and have a heart for letting others know about Jesus, as well.”

Elie’s sister Lidia said she could imagine all the angels in Heaven rejoicing when she was baptized. “I felt the same way, too!” Elie adds.

Elie’s family and mine have grown together and forged a bond that will never be broken. God called her when she was a little girl—and He hasn’t stopped speaking to her since.

Romans 10:15 says, “How beautiful are the feet of messengers who bring good news!” (NLT). Elie has been called, reached, and sent. How very beautiful are her feet!

 


Visit the Vancouver Adventist Community Church

If you’re in the area on Sabbath, please come worship with Elie and her church family at the Seventh-day Adventist Community Church, 9711 NE St. Johns Road in Vancouver, Washington. She would love to meet you! (Photo: Dale Boyington)

Vancouver Adventist Community Church Website

By Bobby Davis

My Journey With Jesus – Brandon Tygret

Brandon Tygret

The Lord continues to bless this ministry with workers who are passionate about bringing the message of salvation and hope to millions who still don’t know Jesus. But perhaps the most energetic ones are those who have come to know Him through 3ABN’s ministry! That’s the case with Brandon Tygret, a young man who has just joined us in 3ABN’s Product Marketing Department. His story is amazing, and we’re happy to share it with you!

“I grew up in Kingston Springs, Tennessee, where my father was a painting contractor,” he begins. “We were a good-sized family of five children, and I was the oldest of three boys and two girls. I was the type of kid who was nice to everyone, but unfortunately I hung out with the wrong crowd, so through my teenage years I was off and on again with drugs and alcohol.

“My family began attending a nondenominational church when I was about 11, and soon I was involved in the youth group. Our church was very young when we began attending, but it quickly grew from a few hundred members to a megachurch of 4,000! I was baptized when I was 12, but although I believed in God and in His Son Jesus, I didn’t know Him personally. Honestly, I really didn’t learn anything other than simple biblical principles—which are important, but not as life-changing as understanding the Bible. I praise God that He winks at our ignorance.”

Tragedy

Then, when Brandon was 18, something terrible happened. His parents had tickets to watch the Tennessee Titans’ NFL football game, and he was responsible for driving the family home from Christmas dinner at his grandmother’s house. “We’d all had a big meal, and as I was driving home, all of us fell asleep—including me. My two sisters, two brothers, and cousin were in the van when it flipped over four or five times. My cousin was ejected through the sliding door, and landed on it, instead of the rocky roadside. My two sisters were ejected as well, and were laying a few feet away from  the van. My brothers were the only ones with seatbelts on, and their injuries were not extensive. But my younger sister broke both arms, and I suffered major injuries, including a broken pelvis. It was a nightmare, but I praise God to this day that all of us survived.”

Under the stress of the accident Brandon began sinking into a deep depression, and by the time he was 20 his use of drugs landed him in a rehabilitation hospital. “I was prescribed depression pills, and for the next four years I self-medicated  with those, or by  taking other drugs.

“I still called myself a Christian, holding on with what little bit of faith I had. But I’ve come to realize that when we ride the fence and tamper with sin, we damage the effect we can have on others—hurting our ability to witness for Jesus, who gave His life for us.”

A New Beginning

After that scare, Brandon says he began to get his life somewhat together and started his first business, remodeling apartments. “I bought my first home and two nice cars, but by age 24 I was going through another rough time, and self-medicating again,” he says.

“By 2007 I was at a real crossroads in life. I’d finally hit bottom and lost almost everything. That’s when I finally asked God to teach me the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth about His Bible. I also asked Him to heal me naturally from addiction and depression. I sold my house and paid off my debts. I really wanted to start all over again.

“Soon after that I was on my knees. I don’t want to live unless I can serve You, I prayed. I don’t want to serve Satan anymore. But I had no idea He would answer so quickly. I was searching for Him in different churches—Pentecostal, Baptist… there must be truth somewhere!

“Then a few weeks later, on my birthday, I got a call from someone I’d become friends with on a job. His name was Kevin Bowen, and he turned out to be the best gift I’ve ever gotten! However, I was a little standoffish when he first told me that he’d found ‘The Truth.’

“I listened for a few minutes, but as soon as I hung up, I felt a strong urge to call him back. You see, he’d been talking about what he’d learned about end-time events on 3ABN.

“He invited me over and we watched 3ABN until 3:00 o’clock in the morning. I asked him what religion they were teaching, and he said they were Adventists; so we began attending the Nashville First Seventh-day Adventist Church.”

Ten Commandments Weekend

As Brandon and Kevin watched, they learned that 3ABN’s Ten Commandments Weekend was coming up, and that thousands of Ten Commandments Twice Removed books would be distributed.

“The first week we attend church, the members took us into the library to pray with us. Later, we asked about that book, and pointing to a pile of boxes, they said, ‘We have a bunch right here!’

“We were excited, and since we knew of a large Christian concert taking place on the riverfront in downtown Nashville, we asked if we could pass some out. They gave us 200, and the next day we passed them all out in less than an hour! Mike Hite, one of the church members, had told us that if we needed more we should call him, so we did. Soon they brought 800 more, and we passed all those out that evening, as well!”

A huge event named, “The Call” was taking place on 7/7/07, with an expected crowd of 60,000 Christians. Unwilling to miss out on the opportunity, Mike and several other members gathered 43,000 pieces of literature. “All told, we passed out 10,000 Ten Commandments Twice Removed and 28,000 other pieces that day,” Brandon beams!

A New Life

On October 6, 2007, Brandon was rebaptized and joined the Seventh-day Adventist Church. “I did this because I felt like I had a whole lot better understanding of the Bible and a closer walk with my Lord,” he says. “Meanwhile, I’d been praying for the Lord to pick a wife for me, because He knew better than I did!”

Four months after he began attending church, he met Dolly—and five months later they were married! “I definitely know she’s the one God wanted for me!” Brandon exclaims. “She’s been with me through the toughest times.”

Soon after, the Tygrets moved to West Virginia to live in the country, and it wasn’t long before they met Ron Davis. “Ron had been in publishing for 40 years and had a literature evangelist program,” Brandon says. “He asked me to join him, and I spent a year in West Virginia before moving to Ohio, where I worked as a literature evangelist for almost two years.

“Then Ron got a call to North Carolina to be their church conference publishing director, and I went with him. I became an assistant publishing director for two years, working with and training other literature evangelists and visiting thousands of homes with truth-filled books. Looking back, I realize the Holy Spirit was training me in public evangelism—and teaching me daily dependence upon God! The program grew from five to 20 workers, but unfortunately the conference decided to downsize their publishing program. However, the same day I found out I was out of a job, my wife told me she’d seen an ad that 3ABN was hiring. I immediately put in for the job, and by God’s grace, I was hired.

The Tygret Family
Brandon and Dolly Tygret with their baby boy Isaac. (Photo: Svetlana Christian)

“Towards the end of 2012, after five years of marriage, Dolly and I had our first baby, Isaac. That time was extra special because, after several years of sharing what God had done for me, my father was baptized on the very day my son was dedicated to the Lord!

“I’m so thankful to work for the same ministry that helped me to learn about God’s love for me,” Brandon concludes, “and I can’t wait to see what He has in store.

“Jesus says, ‘I am the way, the truth, and the life’ (John 14:6). He also told us, ‘If you love Me, keep My commandments’ (John 14:15). I find it interesting that when I became obedient to His Ten Commandments, I began to have more overcoming experiences. I’ve also found that when I give myself in service to others as Jesus did, He provides all I need—and more. What an adventure life has become since I started my journey with Jesus!”

By Bobby Davis

God’s Marvelous Ways – Julie and Volei Kronbauer

Kronbauer Family

By Jill Morikone

It was one of those busy mornings. Returning to my desk, I noticed the voicemail light on my phone. I picked it up and heard a soft voice with a slight accent. “Hello, Jill, this is Julie Kronbauer and I’m calling you from Guyana.” Intrigued, I sat down and listened to the rest of her message.

Later that morning, I called Julie back, and the more she spoke, the more excited I became. This testimony needs to be shared—how God used 3ABN to minister to her, and to her family! But I’m getting ahead of myself… .

Looking for God

Julie grew up in a home divided by religion. Her father was Catholic, but he left most of the religious training to her mother, who was Hindu! There were many idols in her home—the god of light, the god of destruction—and they all had different meanings.

“My mother and grandmother would pray to these idols at the altar in our home,” she says. “Sometimes they’d go to the sea with offerings of fruit for the gods. Yet, somehow, I always hesitated. I might outwardly pray to them, but in my heart I yearned for something more. Deep inside, I always believed in a real God, and I wanted Him.”

At a very young age, God began to answer Julie’s prayer by giving her a Seventh-day Adventist teacher! “When I was only five or six years old,” she says, “my teacher began taking me to a Seventh-day Adventist church here in Georgetown. During Sabbath School, I heard about the Bible and the stories of Moses for the first time. I especially liked the stories about Jesus, but when I returned home the idols would be there, staring at me. When I woke up they were there, and I’d have to pray to them. Then, at bedtime, I’d have to pray to those idols again.”

All too soon, Julie’s teacher left, so she stopped attending the Adventist church. But in spite of being surrounded by idols, she continued to pray in her heart to the God she desperately wanted to know.

Looking for Love

Besides praying to know the real God, Julie had another special request. “I always prayed for love in my life,” she says. “Not human love, but the kind of love that God gives. When I was 17 I was living near my aunt, and I saw this Brazilian man drive past. Later, we met, and we began to write letters to each other, never dreaming we would one day be married!”

I could hear the smile in her voice. “Soon I invited my boyfriend, Volei, to meet my parents, but when he saw the idols in my home, he shook his head. Later he told me, ‘Julie, idol worship is not right. They’re just idols, they’re not really gods.’ There was no debate in my heart about that, for I’d always doubted their power, and wished to know the true God.

“Somehow, God’s hand was over me all through those years,” she adds. “Even as a teenager, I never participated in parties, drank, or ran around with other men. God saved me from all that, even though I didn’t know who He was at that time.

“After we had been together a little while, Volei took me to Brazil to meet his family, and I discovered they were Seventh-day Adventists!” Julie exclaims. “I attended church with them, and began to learn about the Sabbath,” she adds.

God continued to lead Julie. Her husband owned a mining business, and she worked at the bank in Georgetown. When she was 25, their daughter, Valeska, was born. By now, Julie no longer worshiped her idols. She believed in God, but still had many unanswered questions. Then God moved again!

Looking for Answers

One evening, when she switched on the television, she saw something different. It was 3ABN!

“It came on a regular channel here in Georgetown,” she says. “It was Channel 2, and they’d begun airing 3ABN on Friday evening and on Sabbath. The first time I turned it on Pastor David Asscherick was preaching about Revelation. All those beasts and different things really caught my attention, and I couldn’t turn it off. I’d been wondering about Revelation, and now here they were being explained in detail, right before my eyes! I could see it was real. This was the truth. Everything David said was confirmed by the Bible.

Pastor David Asscherick
The first time Julie tuned in, she watched Pastor David Asscherick on 3ABN. “I’d been wondering about Revelation,” she says, “and now here it was being explained. I could see it was real. This was the truth!”

“I watched 3ABN with no prior knowledge of the Bible, and yet I understood it. Sadly, many people study the Bible all the time but don’t understand it. I believe the difference lies in our willingness to surrender to the influence of the Holy Spirit. I began to read my Bible, and I especially liked the Psalms. They comforted and encouraged me; they made me happy. I knew this must come from Jesus.”

Looking for Truth

Unfortunately, 3ABN was on Channel 2 for only a few more months after Julie discovered it. The owners of the channel moved out of Guyana, and someone else bought the channel and removed 3ABN from the lineup.

Almost ten years passed. Julie and Volei had a son, Matheus, and Volei continued in his business, often working on the Sabbath. They only worshiped on Sabbath when they visited Volei’s family in Brazil, but deep in her heart Julie had a desire to learn more truth—and to watch 3ABN again.

Suddenly, their Sky TV satellite quit working, so she called the satellite installer and let him know she’d really like to have 3ABN. Soon he called her back and said, “I have good news. I found 3ABN!”

“That was over a year ago, and we’ve been so incredibly blessed!” she adds.

Looking for a Church

“As my family and I viewed the programs, our hearts were touched by the Holy Spirit,” Julie says. “Jesus entered our hearts and home through the preaching of the Word and the truth aired on 3ABN.

Kronbauer Family at Church
Pastor Hubert Jack (left) was delighted to meet Volei and Julie when they visited Central Seventh-day Adventist Church in Georgetown, Guyana. Today they are members of his congregation. (Photo: Leon Jeffrey)

“There have been so many changes in our lives! My husband and I began a relationship with the Lord Jesus and became serious about walking in the truth we knew. My husband quit working on Sabbath, and we decided to attend the Georgetown Central Seventh-day Adventist Church. But imagine my surprise when I walked in the door and discovered it was the very church my teacher had taken me to all those years before, when I was just a little girl! After the service I walked toward the back to greet the pastor, and told him I was ready to be baptized!”

Pastor Hubert Jack was surprised. “The first time Julie came to my church she asked if she could be baptized,” he exclaims. “I wanted to get her into a class so she could understand our beliefs, but she said, ‘Pastor, that’s okay. I’ve done some studying already, and I’ve been watching 3ABN!’ I could tell right away that this was somebody the Lord had made contact with.”

Volei re-baptized
Volei is re-baptized in his native country of Brazil.
(Photo: Leon Jeffrey)

Her church in Georgetown was undergoing remodeling, and since Julie didn’t want to wait for the baptistery to be finished, Pastor Jack took her to another church and baptized her on January 30, 2013. Her husband was rebaptized, as well, in his home country of Brazil.

“As I look back on my life, I can see God guiding me all the way,” Julie says. “He snatched me from my Hindu environment and placed me on the path to meet God and learn the truth for this time. The only television we watch now is 3ABN—and we watch it all the time! As soon as I wake up in the morning, I click it on. Then we check the schedule at 3abn.org to see what’s airing that day.

“3ABN is like a church in my home,” she laughs. “I get prayer. I get preaching. I get singing. I get marital advice, healthy cooking, and even kids’ programs! However, we still need to mingle with others, and our children need to participate in Sabbath School. God wants us to come together with other believers so we can interact with our brothers and sisters and grow spiritually.”

Today, Julie and her whole family rejoice in newfound and rediscovered truths from the Word of God. How marvelous are the ways He uses to bring truth and light to His children!

By Bobby Davis

The 98-Year-Old Evangelist

We love to share the stories of those who have come to a new understanding of Bible truth through this ministry. But once in awhile a story comes to us that’s a bit different—like this one. It’s about a 98-year-old lady who has unwittingly become an evangelist…just by watching her beloved 3ABN.

Grace

Dr. Kenneth and Sandy Colburn were delighted when his mother came to live with them in Cookeville, Tennessee. However, she required extra care, and finding someone to help on the weekends was proving to be difficult.

The Coburn Family
Dr. Kenneth and Sandy Colburn never dreamed that his 98-year-old mother, Grace, would become such a tremendous witness when she came to live with them in Cookeville, Tennessee.

“We had an Adventist taking care of my mother-in-law,” Sandy says, “and we tried several caretakers before we met Sherie. She had a Christian background, and seemed to enjoy caring for Grace. But we soon noticed she didn’t care for  what Grace liked to watch on 3ABN!

“We’d given her a satellite dish as a gift, and from then on, all she wanted to do was watch 3ABN and the other Seventh-day Adventist channels,” she explains. “Sherie might listen to a health program, but not those sermons!”

3ABN

Sherie Reintjes was raised Catholic as a child, but says her mother stopped attending church after her divorce. “So from then on, I’d find the closest church I could walk to,” she says. “I never attended Sunday School much, though, so I didn’t understand their doctrines very well.

Grace Coburn and Sherrie Reinties
It didn’t take long for Sherie Reintjes (right) to realize that Grace Coburn had a favorite TV channel—3ABN!. (Photo: Sandy Colburn)

“Then, when I began helping with Grace on the weekends, I quickly realized she watched some channels I’d never heard of—like 3ABN. She had some favorite preachers too, but I really didn’t care for their preaching. I’d try turning the volume down, but Grace is hard of hearing, so she’d say, ‘Please turn it up, I can’t hear it!’ ”

Sherie laughs. “There wasn’t a single place I could go in her apartment to get away from all that preaching! I spent the first five months in her bedroom, trying not to listen.

“I remember the arguments I had in my head. He doesn’t know what he’s talking about! My loved ones went to Heaven when they died! But after a while, I noticed that the preachers always back up everything with Scripture.

“Finally, I decided I should know what these Adventists believed, so I could back up my arguments with my own Scripture. I grabbed Grace’s Bible and sat down with her to take notes, but it wasn’t long before I was wondering, Why haven’t I ever heard this before? Then I learned that the Second Coming wasn’t going to be a Secret Rapture at all, and that the statement, ‘Once saved always saved’ wasn’t true!

“And then there was the Sabbath….”

Sabbath

By now the Colburns had two Seventh-day Adventist caregivers who got Sabbaths off, but something was stirring inside Sherie. Finally, she asked Sandy if she could have Sundays off to go to church, and she agreed.

“Of course, I know that Saturday is the true Sabbath, and all, but I’m sure I can’t have that day off….” Sherie half mumbled.

Later, Sandy discussed this new development with her husband, and they decided to talk with Sherie.

“When I asked her if she believed that Saturday was the true Sabbath, she told me she did, so I invited her to come to church with us,” Dr. Colburn says.

“I couldn’t believe my ears,” Sherie beams. “I was so excited!”

Soon she was baptized and says she felt a huge difference. “I well remember that feeling of having all my sins forgiven!” she exclaims. “I felt so clean, and I felt so good! God took away all my sins, and I don’t have to live in the past ever again.”

It’s interesting to note that Sherie avoided 3ABN for about five months, but was baptized just six months after she began watching!

However, that’s not the end of this story!

Eva

Sandy was back to square one. Who could she get to sit with Grace on Saturdays?

“Our options were slim, since folks wanted their weekends off,” she recalls, “but Eva Covington was recommended as a truly caring person who might fit our scheduling needs.”

Grace Coburn and Eva Covington
Eva Covington watches as Grace enjoys her vegetarian meal. (Photo: Sandy Coburn)

However, within weeks, the Colburns noticed that Eva seemed very interested in Grace’s TV sermons, sitting next to her, Bible open, and taking notes. Then one day they discovered why.

“I was raised by a Seventh-day Adventist grandmother, so all of this was somewhat familiar,” Eva explains. “But I’d married young, and my first husband was a member of another church. Then, after he died, I married a Protestant minister. Although I’d invite them to church on Sabbath, neither one ever saw the importance of keeping that day holy, so I just went along with them on Sundays.”

Before long, Dr. Colburn and Sandy invited her to attend church with them. Eva was delighted to, but wouldn’t hear of going without taking Grace with her.

“We are so grateful for Sherie and Eva’s help,” says Dr. Colburn. “They each have their ministry in our church, and it’s a joy to have my mother with us in church most every week.”

Eva is currently taking Bible studies with Sherie and the Livingston Adventist Fellowship’s Bible worker, John Cook.

“I’m planning on being baptized after we complete our studies,” she says, “and I will never put God on the back burner for a marriage again! I’ve been widowed twice, but feel the Lord holding my hand, saying, ‘Fear not, Eva. Be still and know that I am God.’ ”

An Inspiration

Sandy’s watched all these developments with amazement. “My mother-in-law is 98 years old now and carries all the earmarks of a very old person. She also suffers from dementia,” she continues, “but she’s crystal clear on the fact that she loves her Lord!

“Grace also loves to get up slowly, but not on Sabbath! Eva arrives at 8:30, and by 11:00 they’re pulling up in front of our little church. When Sherie sees them drive up, she runs out to help escort her into the service.

“Sometimes Grace catches a nap for a few minutes here and there, but for the most part, she loves being with fellow believers. It is clear to me that her ministry for the Lord is not done, and she has been the conduit that God used to bring truth to two ladies who weren’t looking for a thing!”


Visit the Livingston Seventh-day Adventist Church

Livingston Seventh-day Adventist Fellowship
Sherie, Eva, and Grace meet with fellow believers each Sabbath in their their brand new church next door to the Oasis Medical Clinic. Come worship with them at the Livingston Seventh-day Adventist Fellowship Church, 4130 Bradford Hicks Drive, Livingston, Tennessee. They would love to meet you!

Livingston Seventh-day Adventist Fellowship Church Website

By Bobby Davis

The Influence of Friendship – Fred Moore

Fred Moore in the Studio

By Bobby Davis

When I first heard of Fred Moore from 3ABN engineer Dan Peek, I was instantly impressed at the many ways God has to reach His children who are seeking truth.

On the surface, Fred’s story may seem like so many coincidences, but a closer look reveals the unmistakable fingerprint of God directing every step of his path!

“I grew up in La Crosse, Wisconsin,” Fred begins. “My father was a funeral director, and my mother managed the insurance department for a local manufacturer.

From an early age, I showed interest in all things electronic. In fact, my mother told me that at nine months of age I was watching the back of the TV set! Apparently I was more interested in the glowing tubes than what was showing on the screen!” He chuckles, and then adds, “I enjoyed adjusting TV sets, too!”

During his high school years Fred says he kept busy with ham radio and electronic projects, and during the summers he fixed church organs, CB radios, and audio gear to help pay for his education. “Yes, I was really geeky,” he laughs.

Spiritual Journey

“I was born into a Norwegian-American Lutheran family that, by tradition, was pietistic,” he says, referring to a seventeenth century religious movement in Germany that stressed personal piety over religious formality and orthodoxy.

“I experienced infant baptism, Sunday School, and confirmation. I read the Bible once through, and the New Testament a half dozen times when I was in high school, yet without life experience, much of its meaning was unclear.

“I would say that my spiritual journey has been a winding road, leading back pretty much to where it began. Like C. S. Lewis, the author of The Chronicles of Narnia, I tried out a lot of ideas before finally coming to understand what I have in Jesus.”

Buddhist statues

 

While attending Saint Olaf College in Minnesota, where he majored in physics and religion, Fred became interested in other religions. “As too often happens,” he says, “when I encountered the world’s religions, I became a little confused. I thought I was thinking more like a Buddhist than a Christian, so I moved in that direction and spent the next 18 years in Buddhist study and practice. I studied both the main schools of Buddhism, and spent five years in part time study of Buddhist ethics.”

Working with 3ABN

“I’ve been an amateur radio operator since fifth grade, and before that, I was a shortwave radio listener,” he continues. “So there I was one day in the late 1990s, playing with an analog TV tuner and exploring life above channel 47. Suddenly I found a snowy picture from a 3ABN station in Madison! I’d watch it now and then, and as I look back on that, I believe it was a turning point for me.

“After finishing my doctorate, I taught for two years. I tried really hard to be a professor at a college that was becoming secular, and that’s when I felt a calling to visit 3ABN to help them with my electronics skills.”

The Influence of Friendship

There’s no doubt in our minds that God brought Fred to 3ABN. We were in the midst of building the 3ABN Worship Center, and his electrical skills were sorely needed!

Dan Peek
3ABN engineer, Dan Peek, has no problem believing God brought Fred to 3ABN. ““Fred hadn’t contacted anyone about volunteering,” he says. “He just showed up out of the blue.”

“Fred hadn’t contacted anyone about volunteering,” says 3ABN engineer, Dan Peek. “He just showed up out of the blue. We didn’t know he was coming, so he was just camping out in his van. When I discovered this, I invited him to at least come and take a shower at my home—and that’s how our friendship began. Some time later, I called Fred and asked if he’d be willing to help me change our Madison station over to channel 23. He seemed happy to do so, and he was a great help.

“Our friendship deepened, and he began inviting me to stay at his home when I was in town. He also took meticulous care of that station over the years, and even came to church with me when we installed a studio there at the Madison East Seventh-day Adventist Church.”

As Christians, we must be aware that others watch us carefully, and that our influence can be far-reaching.

“I’ve been working with 3ABN and Dan Peek for over a decade now,” Fred says, “and I have to say that I’ve always been struck by his simplicity, intensity, and earnestness. More than once I have seen his prayers answered—not only in the big things, but in many little ways, too. His favorite verse must be James 2:17, ‘Faith by itself, if it does not have works, is dead,’ because he sure keeps himself busy!”

Last summer, we also kept Fred busy installing digital transmitters, and building a new 3ABN station in Michigan. But it was his commitment to this work that proved to be the Holy Spirit’s opportunity!

Surprises

“All this time, Fred continued to maintain the television equipment at the Madison Church,” Dan says, “and I continued to pray for his family regularly. So I was thrilled when he called and told me that since there was no one to videotape the services each Sabbath, he’d decided to do it himself.”

However, Fred had something else on his mind when he met the pastor.

“I had the privilege of meeting Fred for the first time just before Sabbath School,” says Pastor Titus Naftanaila of the Madison East Seventh-day Adventist Church. “After he was introduced to me by Paul Britain, he told me, ‘Pastor, I want to tell you two things: First, I came to help you broadcast your services on TV channel 23; and second, I want to become a member of your church.’

“I was so surprised by both tremendous opportunities,” he adds. “Things like this don’t happen every Sabbath!”

Dan Peek was unaware of all this, until he called Fred to see if he could help on another job.

“Fred apologized and said he couldn’t leave until Sunday because he was going to be baptized on Sabbath!” Dan exclaims.

Fred Moore is baptized
Fred really surprised Pastor Titus Naftanaila by saying, “I came to help you broadcast your services…and I want to become a member of your church.”

“‘Fred!’ I said. ‘You’re supposed to tell me these things so I can be there!’”

Dan laughs about it, then adds, “Our full-time volunteer, Dan Giguere, had also been praying for Fred and wanted to go to his baptism. But although neither of us could be there in person, we were rejoicing with him
in the Lord!”

On Becoming a
Seventh-day Adventist

“I returned from Buddhism to the Lutheran faith of my childhood and remained in it over the last fifteen years,” Fred says. “So why would I want to become an Adventist?

“First, I believe all of the many Christian denominations, as well as all the world’s major religions, have important roles to play in God’s great purpose of drawing all of Creation to Him. We need to be sensitive to the social and historical contexts of faith traditions. We shouldn’t be judging God’s work in human events.

“Second, I think there’s something indisputably unique, precious, and transformational about Jesus. I gotta tell ya, I tried really hard to find something better, and failed. So, yes, I’m a ‘Jesus freak’!

“Third, many Christian denominations have made, and are continuing to make, key contributions to Christianity, both in the Christian community, and in the larger course of human history. God is using the Church—indeed He has been using many churches, and many congregations!

“The Lutheran Church made two great contributions. Salvation through grace is a battle the Lutherans waged for 500 years, until the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification was signed in the late 1990s. But the other great task that fell on Luther’s shoulders was the Reformation, which inspired much Catholic reform in the following century, and to this day.

“Today other churches and new congregations must carry the Great Commission forward. Being with the Adventists, and especially with Dan Peek, allowed me to see that the Seventh-day Adventists are a small, growing, and sincere Christian faith. That greatly impressed me.

“I believe I’ve found in the Seventh-day Adventists the things that the theologian Karl Barth calls the Old Protestantism. He said that what’s missing today is the capacity to confront and engage with evil in triumph. That is still present in Adventism. They believe that sin can be overcome, and I think it’s one of the qualities that makes it a Remnant Church.”

Pastor Titus Naftanaila is happy to have such an enthusiastic new member in his church and appreciates his contribution of time and effort in its television ministry. “Since his baptism, Fred has continued to be very actively involved in video production and broadcasting of our services on TV,” he says. “He spends a considerable amount of time and resources to accomplish his dream of spreading the good news in Madison.”

We asked Fred what difference he’d noticed as a young Seventh-day Adventist, and he didn’t hesitate. “All of a sudden I’m blessed with work!” he exclaims. “I’m still discovering the joys of the Sabbath,” he adds, “but the whole weekend seems to work better—and that is a joy!”

“Fred’s a happy man,” Dan Peek agrees, “and now he’s even happier in the Lord! He’s always ready and willing to help someone. It’s not about what he can get out of it; he’s just always eager to help. I’m absolutely thrilled that he’s come to a greater knowledge of the Lord!

“I am also humbled as I look back and see how the Lord developed our friendship,” he continues. “I wasn’t intentionally trying to convert him to my faith, but a while back I decided I didn’t need to apologize for practicing my faith in my vehicle, house, church, or my ‘space.’ I’m still a little shy sometimes, but my job is to pray that I might be useful in the Lord’s service, and let the Holy Spirit use me.”


Visit the Madison East Seventh-day Adventist Church

Madison East Seventh-day Adventist Church
If you happen to be in the Madison, Wisconsin, area please stop by the Madison East Seventh-day Adventist Church at 910 Femrite Drive. Pastor Titus Naftanaila, Fred, and the friendly congregation will be thrilled to have you worship with them! (Photo supplied)

 

Madison East Seventh-day Adventist Church Website

By Bobby Davis

Overjoyed! – Connie Korcsmaros

Connie with Pastor and Mrs. Grimes

After speaking in New Port Richey, Florida, 3ABN president, Pastor Jim Gilley, saw a familiar couple coming his way. Pastor Gary and Juanita Grimes were old friends, and they introduced him to Connie Korcsmaros.

“We’re always thrilled when we get a chance to meet someone who has found more truth by watching 3ABN,” he says, “and Connie was certainly one of these. This lady is on fire for the Lord, and I know you’ll be blessed by her testimony!”

Difficult Beginning

Little Connie was adopted when she was two, but says her home was a terrible place to grow up. “I was the only child, and they renamed me Vicky,” she says.

“My father was a drunk and would pass out on the couch all the time. However, my mother would take me to church with her on Sundays, and I learned about Jesus. I’ve always loved Him, and I’ve always said my prayers every night. But by the time I was 15, life had become unbearable, and I told my father I was going to run away.”

Connie’s determination to overcome her difficult circumstances  no doubt served her well. She’s been married for 23 years and has raised two wonderful daughters. But before her adoptive mother passed away, she handed Connie her birth certificate.

“I knew I’d been adopted, so I just put it in my purse. Then later, in my forties, I decided to look up my birth mother. That’s when I discovered my name was Connie Francis, and I liked it so much, I changed it back.

“When I found my dad and discovered I had brothers and sisters, I just freaked out!” she exclaims. “Today I talk to my mom at least three times a week, and stay in touch with my dad by e-mail, too.”

Connie’s been on a quest for truth all her life. “I learned about Jesus, but I was never taught any truths,” she says. “My husband and I began visiting an Episcopalian Church, but then we stopped attending. I tried finding fulfillment in drinking and dancing, and even school, but nothing was satisfying. One day a neighbor told my husband about a church and we began attending. However, I felt like I needed more.”

Cancer?

Then came the day that changed Connie’s life. “It was June of 2011, and a week or so after a routine mammogram I received a call from my doctor’s office telling me that my results were abnormal, and that I’d need more tests.

“I was scared, so after that call, I started talking and praying to God a lot more! That’s when my daughter offered me one of her Christian music CDs. I was finally ready to listen, and the words really touched me. I got closer to Jesus, and I’d look up at the sky and just sing to Him on my way to and from work!

“Finally, the doctor called me in to show me the abnormalities, and it was very scary. He told me I’d need a biopsy at the end of the month, so I kept listening to my Christian CDs while I waited.

“Then the miracle happened. At the end of that month, the doctor said, ‘I can’t biopsy what I cannot see!’ I believe God allowed that cancer scare to get my attention—and it worked! I thanked God I didn’t have breast cancer, and I continued to grow closer to Him. I threw out all my rock and pop CDs, rock star autographs, and magazines. Then I deleted those songs from my iPod and replaced them with Christian music. I stopped skipping church, and started recording two TV sermons each weekend to watch during the week. People at work began seeing a difference in me, and I explained to them that I was following Jesus.”

Another Station

“Then, at the beginning of 2012, I began recording a couple of other TV stations, and one of them was 3ABN,” Connie continues. “I noticed a few of the pastors would say, ‘Happy Sabbath,’ and I thought, I wonder why they’re saying that, since they’re not Jewish?  

“I thought the Sabbath was a Jewish tradition, but one day, after watching Pastor Doug Batchelor, I saw a commercial that said, ‘For thousands of years, man has worshiped God on the seventh day of the week. But now millions worship on the first day. Who changed it? And does it matter? Go to SabbathTruth.com and find out.’

 

“I wrote down the web address, and began researching the Sabbath on my own by googling, ‘What day is the Sabbath? Saturday or Sunday?’  (I would have saved myself a lot of time if I’d just gone to the website!)

“I began honoring the Sabbath on Sunday, and when I explained it to my mom, she did, too. We began resting from house and yard work, avoided buying, selling, or doing our own pleasure that day. I also told my husband I’d be grocery shopping on Saturday, not Sunday.

“Then I researched the Sabbath some more, and suddenly realized I had the wrong day!” Connie exclaims. “The Sabbath was Saturday, not Sunday! So I called my mom and told her ‘We’ve been honoring the wrong day!’ Her husband then said he already knew this, and she said, ‘Then why didn’t you tell me?’

“I was so happy to find this out—but I still didn’t have it right, because I was honoring the Sabbath from midnight to midnight!”

Even More Truth

Connie says she finally visited the SabbathTruth.com website in June 2012. “I should have done it in the first place!” she says. “So I called my mom again and said, “We’re still not right! The Sabbath begins on Friday at sunset, and ends at sunset on Saturday!”

“ ‘Then I’ll start keeping it from sunset to sunset!’ she told me.”

Connie’s decisions came with some challenges. “I requested a meeting with my senior pastor, but he was out of town, so I spoke with another pastor at the church. I e-mailed him on what the church taught about the Sabbath, and he replied that Christians are no longer under the Law. So I asked him if he believed we now have nine commandments, instead of ten, and at that point he invited me to come see him the next Sunday. I brought some Scripture texts, but discovered he didn’t believe we are under any of the Ten Commandments; that Jesus had nailed them all to the cross.

“When I tried to explain from Scripture that we are to keep God’s commandments, and that Jesus nailed the ceremonial laws to the cross, he wouldn’t listen, and got annoyed with me. So I told him I’d still keep Sabbath holy, and he said, ‘That’s fine. We have a Saturday service.’ ”

Connie decided to look for churches in her city that kept the Sabbath, and she found the New Port Richey Seventh-day Adventist Church. The next Sabbath, she was there.

“Eventually my husband and I met with the senior pastor [of our former church], and when I mentioned the Seventh-day Adventists, he said, ‘Do you know they are a cult?’ I didn’t expect that from him, and I couldn’t defend any of his accusations, since I’d only attended a few services. Finally he asked if I thought Sunday keepers were all going to hell, and I said, ‘No!’ Then he said, ‘The church you’re going to thinks that!’ to which I replied, ‘I’ve never been taught that.’”

Her pastor went on to say that God only meant for us to get spiritual rest, and that any day was fine. “My day is Friday,” he offered.

On her way home, Connie called her new Adventist friends, Pastor Gary Grimes and his wife Juanita, and they were immensely reassuring. Soon she decided to be re-baptized and asked Pastor Grimes if he would be willing to baptize her.

“We began to study with her, and soon realized that Connie knew the Bible teachings as well as we did, because she’d been studying with 3ABN!” Pastor Grimes exclaims. “She is especially well versed in the Sabbath, and is such a blessing to us!”

After her baptism on November 17, 2012, Connie says she felt compelled to work in prison ministry. “I watched 3ABN’s Free Indeed series, and I feel that God is calling me to minister in a women’s prison. And while I’m waiting for clearance, I’m ministering through the mail.

“He’s also laid a burden on my heart to e-mail pastors of Sunday churches, asking them about the Sabbath and sending them some Bible texts to consider. I just plant the seeds—the rest is up to God.

“My passion for the Lord is over the top, and I’ve learned so much truth watching 3ABN. I became a vegetarian years ago when I watched the movie Babe, but since I became an Adventist, I stopped drinking, too! Our awesome Father in Heaven is using 3ABN to spread His truths, and He’s certainly blessed my life. There’s nothing I’d rather do than be a witness to others of the new truths I’ve learned!”


Visit the New Port Richey Seventh-day Adventist Church

New Port Richey Seventh-day Adventist Church
If you’re in the area, why not visit the New Port Richey Seventh-day Adventist Church? You’ll find it at 6424 Trouble Creek Road. You’ll find a loving congregation there that will be delighted to have you join them for worship and Christian fellowship!

New Port Richey Seventh-day Adventist Church Website

By Bobby Davis

Shining Ever Brighter – Wayne and Mary Lou McGill

By Jill Morikone

Wayne and Mary Lou McGill are two of the sweetest, most gracious people I’ve ever met. As I visit them in their lovely, rustic home, the joy on their faces and the presence of Jesus fills their home with light and peace.

Wayne and Mary Lou McGill’s rat terrier, ‘GG,’ looks out over the McGill’s peaceful yard.

They each sit in their favorite recliners, their rat terrier, “GG,” claiming first Wayne’s lap, then Mary Lou’s. I sit in a red, straight-backed chair that belonged to Wayne’s grandfather. Fingers poised over the keyboard. Eager to hear their story.

Wayne McGill“I was the second child of five,” Wayne begins. “You know, the one who doesn’t get much attention,” he chuckles. “My dad was a farmer, till the oil fields came in during the late 30s. My parents were good people, but didn’t attend church much, so my religious background was almost nil. However, when I was 14, two of my friends and I decided to attend a local church revival. The preacher knew we hadn’t been baptized, so he told us, ‘If you boys don’t join the church tonight, when you die, you’ll go straight to hell and burn forever and ever!’ I wasn’t that versed in the Bible, but I’d always heard that God was a loving God. It didn’t make sense that He could be that cruel, so that night I left the church—and didn’t go back!”

Mary Lou McGillLike Wayne, Mary Lou was raised in southern Illinois. Her dad farmed, but during World War II, he began working for the railroad, and then later, for the park service.

Since her parents and grandparents were actively involved in church, she also attended regularly. Mary Lou had an older brother, who died years later in a car accident.

“That was very difficult, because we were so close,” she says, pausing as she remembers the pain. “That’s life on this earth. We all have our hardships and trials.”

 

Family Life

However, life has its sweet moments, too. Wayne and Mary Lou met in high school, and her eyes twinkle as she remembers that time. “I had another boyfriend then, but it was altogether different when Wayne came along! We married right out of high school in 1949, and our daughter Sandy, and son Larry, followed in fairly quick succession.”

Wayne began a construction business right away, and they moved to DeKalb, Illinois, where he and his crew kept busy building homes and commercial properties. “This fellow was meant to build houses,” Mary Lou says, “and he’s built a lot of them!”

The McGill Family
Wayne and Mary Lou  raised their children, Larry and Sandy, to love the Lord.

Although they’d stopped going to church for a while, when the kids came along they started attending again and life was good—until Wayne developed health problems. After endless doctor visits they finally discovered that he had a large aneurysm, and a specialist in Chicago said, “Go home and enjoy Christmas, then come back and we’ll try exploratory surgery.”

“We didn’t have any hope whatsoever,” Mary Lou says, “but our banker suggested we go to The Mayo Clinic. We did, and Mayo was our miracle.”

The Last Place for TV

God had a plan for Wayne, and he pulled through. With renewed energy, he opened a cabinet shop, and later a car dealership in Mt. Vernon, Illinois. It was at his dealership, Economy Motors, that he first heard about 3ABN.

“Two of the Shelton brothers came into my dealership, and we started talking about church. I said, ‘Well, I belong to a church,’ and then one of them said, ‘We’re getting ready to start a TV station.’

“ ‘Oh yeah? Where at?’ I asked.

“ ‘In Thompsonville,’ he said.

Thompsonville? I thought. That would be the last place you’d put a TV station, but now I wish I’d paid more attention to them.”

Despite being active members of their church, Wayne still had some unsettled questions about the Bible. Although he’d accepted the idea of an eternally burning hell, he had a new question about the seventh-day Sabbath.

“One day I asked our preacher about it,” Wayne says, “and he told me the Sabbath was changed to Sunday in honor of Jesus’ resurrection. I accepted that for a while, but Mary Lou and I went over to Eldorado for church one Sunday, and I asked a deacon about it.

“ ‘Why don’t we keep the Sabbath?’ I asked at different times. Finally he got tired of hearing me talk like that, and said, ‘If I were you, I’d start looking for another church!’

“ ‘You know, that’s what I’ve been thinking,’ I answered. And I never went back.”

A Deep Loss

In 1995, tragedy stuck their lives. Their son Larry was driving home on his brand-new motorcycle, and as he topped a hill, an elderly man in a pickup truck appeared, driving on his side of the road. Larry laid his motorcycle down on the road to avoid a head-on collision, but was struck by another vehicle and died instantly.

“I got deathly sick about the time it happened,” Wayne says. “I just sensed something was terribly wrong, so I went in and lay down. Within the hour, our daughter and son-in-law came and said, ‘Dad, Mom, we’ve got something to tell you.’ ”

Wayne takes a deep breath. “You just go into deep shock, and while some people get angry at God, that thought never even entered our minds. It never shook our faith.”

Mary Lou’s sweet voice wavers. “No, we never blamed God. We couldn’t do that—God is a loving God. But it’s very hard to get over. That’s just part of you—you know, it’s your child.”

We sit for a moment in silence as the words blur on my computer. Then Wayne continues. “Before Larry was killed, I had just retired again, and we’d purchased a small motor home. We were beside ourselves and just couldn’t stay home, staring at the walls. I think we would’ve lost our minds. So we began to travel, and went to Florida every winter, coming back north in the summer. The travel really helped to keep us going.

“I believe it was while we were in Leesburg, Florida, on one of our first trips, that we found 3ABN, and the more we watched, the more we liked it. Everything they presented followed the Bible exactly, and I realized this was the TV station the Sheltons had talked about years before!”

(Note: After checking for the nearest 3ABN TV station, I discovered it was over 80 miles away—but that’s not the first time God’s done the impossible!)

“After watching a couple of years, we began attending our church on Sunday, and Seventh-day Adventist churches on Sabbath wherever we traveled,” Wayne continues, “and we first attended the Thompsonville Seventh-day Adventist Church near 3ABN in the early 2000s. We came in the door and Pastor John Lomacang, Danny Shelton, and John Stanton, were all right there. We sat down, and saw the prettiest blonde girl, who I thought must have still been in high school, and a dark headed, good-looking guy,” he chuckles. “You and Greg sat right behind us!”

In 2005, Mary Lou had heart surgery and they settled down at home again. They also began attending the Thompsonville church on a regular basis. “We knew this was the right place to be,” Mary Lou says. “The people treated us so nicely there, and we knew what they taught was the truth.”

Shining Ever Brighter

The McGill’s were baptized on April 19, 2008. “We were taught so many things that weren’t quite right,” he says, “so we decided we needed to be baptized into our new faith. Mary Lou and I are so thankful that the Lord impressed Danny to start 3ABN, because we might have never realized these truths otherwise. We still have a lot to learn, but we’re so thankful for what God has shown us.

“Oh, and one more thing,” he adds. “When we first saw Pastor Jim Gilley when 3ABN was in Dallas, we both liked him so much that we said, ‘If we ever get close to where he’s preaching, we’ll go hear him.’ And then he became 3ABN’s President!”

As I drove away from their home, my heart was so thankful for how God had led this precious couple, step by step. What a joy to watch God at work! Truly, the McGill’s path has been “like the morning sun, shining ever brighter till the full light of day.” Proverbs 4:18 (NIV).