Dear
Present Truth Magazine Subscriber:
We
are glad to have you as a subscriber to our Present Truth Magazine. Below
you will find articles from individual authors who have written for our
magazine. Our prayer for all who
receive read these articles is that the Lord "...may give to you the
Spirit of wisdom and revelation in the
knowledge of Him, the eyes of your understanding being enlightened; that you may
know what is the hope of His calling, and what are the riches of the glory of
His inheritance in the saints” (Ephesians 1:17-18).

Wisdom for 21st-Century Living
By A. Wilson Phillips
Some people who appear to be
successful fail to find the true meaning of life. They can be educators,
philosophers, psychologists, poets, playwrights, kings, government
leaders, scientists, and even theologians and end up empty, often
depressed, worn out, and even suicidal.
Solomon, a king in ancient
Israel, is an interesting example of one who had wealth, riches,
pleasures, and honor before men and satisfied his natural human appetite
with material things. Still he did not find the true meaning of life
until he was very old and contemplating death. I believe that the
Creator placed Solomon’s writings in the Scriptures for every generation
to profit from his experiences.
When Solomon replaced his
father David on the throne, God appeared to him in a dream. Visions and
dreams were common ways for Israel’s covenant-keeping God (Yahweh) to
communicate to His leaders and prophets. In Solomon’s dream, God asked
him, “What shall I give you?”
The very humble king
responded:
Give to Your servant an understanding heart to
judge (rule or govern) your people, that I may discern between good
and evil (1 Kings 3:5, 9).
Divine wisdom is the key to
finding true meaning to life and living “under the sun” on this
planet. A human being cannot find true wisdom apart from revelation
from God.
Solomon’s downfall started when
he began to “search out by wisdom concerning all that is done under
heaven” (Eccl. 1:13). Normally, “wisdom” in biblical literature
means piety, godliness, and virtue, but this text is speaking of human
wisdom, perhaps along the lines of Greek philosophy, where truth is sought
solely by the intellect. The pursuit of human wisdom is vanity and like
grasping for a handful of wind (Eccl. 1:2, 4:16, 12:8).
Solomon’s writings in
Ecclesiastes speak clearly to the culture of our day. While experiencing
every conceivable pleasure and earnestly pursuing and achieving
unprecedented success and wealth, Solomon concluded that life is
meaningless apart from a vital connection and devotion to God the
Creator.
Solomon says,
Remember now your Creator in the days of your
youth,
Before the difficult days come,
And the years draw near when you say,
“I have no pleasure in them” (Eccl. 12:1).
As we grow older, we frequently
experience the symptoms of aging, such as the loss of sight, hearing,
teeth, etc.
Then the dust will return to the earth as it was,
And the spirit will return to God who gave it
(Eccl. 12:7).
Therefore, while we are young,
we should seek to please the Lord and honor Him in our work so that God
can give wisdom, knowledge, and joy. Through total devotion to God through
Jesus Christ, we have access to the wisdom, discernment, and knowledge of
God that leads to successful living and true meaning in life.
This writer has been young and
now is growing older. I have found and currently
experience
true pleasure in my union with Father God. I truly believe the best is
yet to come.
Abundant Life
Covenant Church sponsors a college/career ministry called Power House
(located in the Bears Mall at Grand and National in Springfield), and
we encourage those of you ages 18-25 to come and visit. You will discover
the true source of all wisdom for 21st-century living.
A. Wilson Phillips is the co-founding and senior
pastor of Abundant Life Covenant
Church.

CONNECTED
By Richard K. Clark
This month’s Present Truth
is emphasizing college ministry. College students are at one of the
most crucial junctures of their lives. They are no longer children but
still in the process of integrating into the adult society. They’re
experimenting, questioning, and testing life as they know it; they’re
endeavoring to find the balance of living for the moment and planning for
the future.
One of the issues that college
students will need to scrutinize is our western world’s emphasis on
individualism. It is my conviction that one of the deepest needs of our
hearts is really to be a part of something larger than ourselves, to be
vitally grafted in to a living, thriving cause. Let’s look at three
examples where the individual can be linked to greatness.
Richard K. Clark is an associate pastor of Abundant Life Covenant Church.

Power House
By Byron Hamilton
An ancient prophecy reads:
I will give you a new heart—I will give you new
and right desires—and put My Spirit within you. I will take out your stony
heart of sin and give you a new heart of love (Ezek. 36:26, TLB).
Approximately 865 years later,
Jesus of Nazareth recognized the fast-approaching day when this divine
prophecy would become a reality. He told His disciples:
I will pray the Father, and He will give
you another Helper, that He may abide with you forever—the Spirit of
truth… He dwells with you and will be in you. I will not
leave you orphans; I will come to you (John 14:16-18).
As Jesus’ earthly ministry was
drawing to a close and He was about to return to His Father, He instructed
the waiting disciples: “You shall receive power when the Holy Spirit
has come upon you” (Acts 1:8a).
Since the beginning of
creation, no one who followed God’s ways had ever experienced the
permanent indwelling of God’s Holy Spirit. The disciples had no idea of
the magnitude of Jesus’ statement. They were to be the first to receive
God’s power inwardly in the person of the Holy Spirit—who would free them
from all forms of psychological bondage, cleanse them from guilt, fill
their lives with purpose, and bring them unimaginable comfort, joy, and
peace.
When Jesus said, “You shall
receive power…,” He used the Greek word “dynamis”
(doo'-nam-is), from which we get our English word “dynamite.” The Holy
Spirit would give them the power to live above the former control of sin
and the power to live in a dynamic relationship with their Creator. For
the first time in man’s existence, God’s nature could now be expressed
through a people who had received His power.
Jesus stated, “…You will
know that I am in My Father, and you in Me, and I in you (John 14:20).
He also promised:
If anyone loves Me, he will keep My word. And he
who loves Me will be loved by My Father. I will love him and manifest
Myself to him… and We will come to him and make Our home with him
(John 14:21, 23).
Not only did Christ’s followers
become “power houses” individually, they were placed together to form a
corporate “house” for the Spirit of God.
Now, therefore, you are no longer strangers and
foreigners, but fellow citizens with the saints and members of the
household of God, having been built on the foundation of the apostles and
prophets, Jesus Christ Himself being the chief cornerstone, in whom the
whole building, being joined together, grows into a holy temple in the
Lord, in whom you also are being built together for a dwelling place of
God in the Spirit (Eph. 2:19-22).
The greatest need in the human
psyche is the need to belong. This innate desire is felt the strongest
during the transition from adolescence to adulthood. It is what drives us
to find a mate, to settle down, to create a family; it’s what drives us to
find our significance. God placed this desire in you and me. It’s what He
uses to draw us into a relationship with Himself where we find our true
sense of belonging and our true sense of significance.
Jesus said, “I am the way,
the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me”
(John 14:6), and again, “No one can come to Me unless the Father who
sent Me draws him…” (John 6:44).
The Father draws us by tugging
at the emotions of our heart. The purpose of Power House (our
college/career ministry) is to provide a home for those the Father is
drawing. If He is drawing you, come and visit with us. It’s where you
belong!
Most of the stories written in
this issue of Present Truth are by young people who have discovered
the power of a changed life through an encounter with the Spirit of God.
Byron Hamilton and his wife Leesa lead the
Power House college/career ministry and own Med-Soft National Training
Institution in Springfield, Missouri.

Holy Spirit as my
Teacher
By Matt Bears
Last May I graduated from
Missouri State University with a bachelor of science degree in
manufacturing systems management. I experienced success and failure during
my time in college. Both my success and my failures confirm the importance
of the role Holy Spirit plays in my life.
I spent my first year of
college in rebellion against Holy Spirit and ended up failing. After
surrendering to the Lord, I began to seek Holy Spirit on what He would
desire for me to do. As I sought Him, He revealed to me that I was to
finish up my college education and that I should seek a degree in
manufacturing. I sought Holy Spirit diligently on this, but my motivation
was to get direction so that I could continue doing things my way.
At the time, I thought the Lord’s job was to give me direction, but I was
the one who would work it out.
As I began to work toward my
degree, I took a math class that was extremely challenging to me. I did
not have the discipline or the understanding to pass the class and ended
up failing it. This deeply disturbed me because I thought that as a
Christian I should be getting A’s and not F’s. (I still believe this.)
However, I was not relying on Holy Spirit to pass the class, I was relying
on myself, and this is the reason that I failed.
I learned the role of Holy
Spirit involved more than just giving me the direction for my degree. I
learned that Holy Spirit desired for me to rely on Him at every point in
my journey through college.
Proverbs 3:5-6 says:
Trust in the Lord with all your heart
And lean not on your own understanding;
In all your ways acknowledge Him,
And He will make your paths straight.
I took the same class again
with a new understanding. I would pray for Holy Spirit to help me to focus
on my homework before I would do it. I began to pray for my teachers. I
also prayed for Holy Spirit to bring things to my remembrance as I was
taking tests. I remember one time when I was taking a test that I could
not recall how to work through a certain problem. In the middle of this
problem, I was prompted to sing a praise song under my breath as I shifted
my focus on the Lord. He brought to my remembrance how to work the
problem. At the end of the semester, I ended up with a high B in the
class.
I believe that God gives each
individual a calling for his/her ministry. However, it is important to
realize that our highest calling is to seek the Lord in the journey as
well.
But seek first the kingdom of God and His
righteousness, and all these things shall be added to you (Matt.
6:33).
Matt Bears is a member of Power House and
a graduate of Missouri State University.

Hearing God’s Voice
By Angel Lemmonds
I grew up in church and heard
testimonies of how words spoken from the Lord had completely changed
individuals’ lives. When I was sixteen, I made a decision that I was going
to do my own thing. I turned my back on the Lord and rebelled against Him.
At nineteen, unbeknown to me, the Lord began to call my heart to Him. The
rebellious lifestyle I was living was no longer fulfilling, and I began to
desire more out of life. It was during this time that I started a new job
and discovered that my supervisors and most of the employees were young
Christians. God knew the desires of my heart before I did and placed me in
a situation where I would see and hear His presence through my coworkers.
As my heart began to soften
towards the Lord, it began to open up towards my coworkers, and I heard
their words differently than I had before. I began to hear testimonies of
how God had spoken to these young people and had completely changed them.
These testimonies were similar to ones I had heard growing up.
Unfortunately, the more I wanted to hear God’s voice personally, the more
unworthy I felt. I was fearful that God had turned His back on me because
of my sin. I became frantic, and my guilt was overwhelming. I let my
emotions control me, and my mind could not rest. I began to think that I
wasn’t chosen by God at all.
One night I had the
understanding that if I could just get completely quiet and make my mind
be still, and come to the Lord expecting to hear His voice, that I would
indeed hear His voice. So that’s what I did. The moment I was able to get
quiet, God’s voice came quietly to my inner being and said, “I have never
left you, nor have I forsaken you.” God was there the whole time; He had
never turned His back on me! All I needed to do was be still and focus on
Him. The Bible says in Psalms 46:10, “Be still and know that I am
God.”
By God’s lovingkindness and
mercy, He forgives us; however, many times we need to die to our negative
emotions (fear, anxiety, guilt, etc.) and say, “Lord, I lay these fears
down. My emotions are not what I live by; they are not truth. I live by
Your words.” Matthew 4:4 says:
It is written, “Man shall not live by bread
alone, but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God.”
Not long ago, the Lord reminded
me through the above Scripture how important it is to hear His voice every
day, to believe and live by His words. His quiet inner voice and His
written Word are what now sustain me and give me confidence daily. He is
all that I am and all that I have need of.
God actively speaks today
through the Holy Spirit and pursues His children by His spoken and written
Word. He desires to have fellowship with us and delights in us. I am so
thankful God desires to give us a successful future and will never leave
or forsake you and me.
Angel Lemmonds is a member of Power House
and an insurance follow-up representative at Cox Medical Center in
Springfield, Missouri.

Marriage—Two Good Forgivers
By Amy Clark
Like most little girls, I thought marriage would be that fairy tale life
you see in the movies. What is not shown in most movies are the difficult
times that married couples face. The
truth is, the person that you are closest to will be able to hurt you the
most. I heard our youth pastor say that a good marriage is the
union of two good forgivers. I laughed
at the time, and then a few months later I got the opportunity to put his
wisdom in practice. My husband and I had only been married a few weeks
when the Lord spoke to me and told me that if I wanted our
relationship to last and be fulfilling, there were a few things that I
personally was going to have to do. I
had to learn that forgiving is not just about saying, “I'm sorry,”
but it is also about saying, “I forgive you.”
A study from Duke
University
Medical Center
revealed what forgiveness does for our bodies. The study showed
that those who had forgiven others experienced lower
levels of pain and fewer associated
psychological problems, like anger and depression, than those who had not
forgiven. The study demonstrated that the body participates in our
negative emotions, not just through the muscles but also through
cardiovascular disease and a weaker resistance to infection. People
who reported higher levels of forgiveness
were more satisfied with their lives
and less likely to report symptoms of psychological distress,
including feeling nervous, restless, or sad.
Marriage has been a wonderful opportunity for me to practice forgiving. As
Christians, we have no “right” to withhold forgiveness, regardless of how
bad someone hurts us. Jesus said it best:
For if you forgive men their trespasses,
your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if you do not
forgive men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your
trespasses (Matt. 6:14-15).
Peter asked Jesus:
“Lord, how
often shall my brother sin against me and 1 forgive him?
Up to seven times? Jesus said to him,
“I do not say to you, up to seven times, but up to seventy times seven”
(Matt. 18:21-22).
Jesus is not giving us a legalistic
formula; He means limitless forgiveness. True humility is laying
down my own feelings and asking Father God what His will is in that
situation. I never realized the importance of true forgiveness until I
humbled myself and practiced it, and I
continue to practice it. It is a liberating feeling—the best way to live
life. Whenever I feel unwilling to release forgiveness, I always
think, “Do I want my heavenly Father to forgive me?”
Amy Clark is a
member of Power House and is a financial counselor for Cox Health Medical
Center in Springfield, Missouri.

Tested By Fire
By Kyle Clark
In this you greatly rejoice, though now for a
little while, if need be, you have been grieved by various trials, that
the genuineness of your faith, being much more precious
than gold that perishes, though it
is tested by fire...
(1 Pet. 1:6-7a).
Higher education is considered one of
the most quality investments a person can make. It is believed in our “Age
of Enlightenment” that college classrooms are where minds are
molded, ideas are formed, and where the future of society rests. In
college universities today, most
professors have academic freedom to teach however they want.
We all speak and teach from our bias. Regardless
of how hard we try to be objective, what is inside of us will eventually
come out. “For out of
the abundance of the heart the mouth
speaks” (Matt. 12:34b).
A few years ago I entered Missouri
State University with specific
values and priorities. Some of my values and priorities are not in keeping
with the ideologies of liberal universities today. This placed me
in a rather uncomfortable position. I have had many opportunities to speak
my faith with professors and students. Sometimes, because of fear, I have
elected to keep silent; however, I can always count on
another opportunity to present itself
in this setting.
About a year or two into
college, I declared religious studies as my major. Talk about a “pilgrim
in an unholy land.” Because I study religion at a secular university, my
conviction in God has come under question. All the previous
thoughts and beliefs I had were now exposed under the microscope to be
examined. I started hearing many
things that contradicted what I learned growing up in church. The
authenticity of God’s Word was
under attack in most of my classes not just in religious studies.
As a result of these
experiences, I have learned to read, study, and think. It has been
difficult to attend a university which
emphasizes human reason over divine revelation. Whenever I hear something
that is foreign to my thinking, from students or teachers, I
examine those words with God’s Word, the Bible. His Word has become my
measuring stick for truth. The pastors
at my local church have stabilized me during this time. They
have always encouraged me to embrace
these challenges, because it gives me another chance to seek God
and His Word. This is why it is so crucial for us to plug into a local
church; we need pastors to help guide us along during the times when our
faith is tested. Without this
understanding to harness me, I would have easily been “tossed to and
fro” (cf. Eph.
4:11-16).
Unfortunately, under this pressure
many turn away from their upbringing and embrace
these liberal ideologies. Often this
is because Christian young people develop beliefs not convictions. Faith
in our culture is seen as just some belief. Faith is more than just a
belief; it requires action/obedience (Heb. 11). I believe too many
embody the words of the 2004 Presidential
candidate John Kerry when he said, “I
leave my faith at the door.” This is part of
America’s problem today; we’ve left
our “faith at the door.” Faith is not something that can be left at
the door. Faith is what enables God to move in our circumstances.
My time in college has been a quality
investment. I’ve learned how to respect my
professors and classmates even when
we disagree, which seems to be quite often. Over time, I have become a
more panoramic thinker. However, my view of God is still very focused.
I believe in the inerrant, infallible, and authentic Word of God,
regardless of the scrutiny. Some say
that makes me a narrow minded, unintelligent
thinker. Oh well, the religious
leaders in Jesus’ day didn’t believe He was that intelligent
either, so I’m in good company!
In order to make steel, one needs
intense heat. Our faith must be tested by fire because God is
strengthening our convictions like steel. The building material will snap
under pressure if it’s not tested by heat.
Kyle Clark is a
member of Power House and a student at Missouri State University. He is
employed with the Springfield News-Leader.

Transformation
By Brandon DuPree
For a long time I struggled
with not knowing who I am and what I am supposed to do with my life. I
have come to understand who the Lord has made me to be and that my
identity is from Him. Although I know this to be true now, the road to the
truth has been a humbling experience as well as a confidence builder.
Over the course of time, my
confidence had been shot due to my lack of success. My most recent
relationship ended on a not-so-good note, leaving me feeling worthless. It
was during this time, when I felt all hope was lost, that I found the
strength to proceed. In our weaknesses, the Lord is strong. I learned to
develop a dependency upon Him for every situation.
For our light affliction … is working for us a
far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory (2 Cor. 4:17).
The trials and tribulations
that we face both within ourselves and without are all meant to build us
up in the character of Christ. Learning to trust in the things we cannot
see is acting with childlike faith. Many times I have had situations
inflicted upon me from external sources outside of my control, such as
illness, and have also experienced the inability to change those within my
personal sphere of influence. Negative thoughts that I created within my
own mind inevitably led to self-inflicted bondage. Each of these instances
was used by God to conform me to His image.
I began to feel utterly at the
mercy of situations and circumstances that had befallen me. Then the Lord
spoke through James 1:2-4:
My brethren, count it all joy when you fall into
various trials, knowing that the testing of your faith produces patience.
But let patience have its perfect work, that you may be perfect and
complete lacking nothing.
Applying this Scripture,
incredibly, my outlook toward all the difficulties in life has changed
from defeat to victory.
The Lord has revealed to me the
essence of who He is in the midst of all the trials: “He who does not
know love does not know God, for God is love” (1 John 4:8). The very
essence of what my heart had longed for, which was to know love and to be
loved, is the very essence of who God is within me. My search to be loved
ceased in the world, and I began seeking love in God. The eyes of love
were opened for me and have become my guide.
For the earnest expectation
of the creation eagerly waits for the revealing of the sons of God
(Rom. 8:19). This verse has been impressed upon my heart for quite
some time. I had gone through a period in my life where I knew the truth
about God and spoke it but did not live it. I found out I reap what I sow.
The people that I so desperately wanted to touch and see change, did not.
To be a Christian is to be Christ-like and to live as He lived. In order
to see the fruits, I must be the fruit. By being God’s fruit, I
will draw my fellow man through my actions and bring them to understanding
by imparting God’s truth to them.
Christ said:
You did not choose me, but I chose you and
appointed you that you should go and bear fruit, and that your fruit
should remain, that whatever you ask the Father in My name He may give you
(John 15:16).
Brandon
Dupree is a member of Power House and a student at Ozark Technical College
in Springfield, Missouri

Changing from the Inside Out
By Amanda Bears
In my teenager years, I had a relationship
with the Lord. He blessed me with the desire to want to please my
teachers, parents, and coaches. I was independent and was used to doing
things by myself. I displayed an appearance that was intimidating to
others, and it made it easy for my peers not to like me.
Playing sports and working hard to make good
grades, I became so involved in wanting to be the best that I neglected
putting effort into my relationships. I focused on myself. I also
developed into an overly sensitive, insecure individual. I thought if I
were able to change my appearance then maybe I would be accepted by my
peers. I ended up trying to handle my problems by portraying a rough
exterior; then because that wasn't working, I became even more sensitive
on the inside. I was very miserable and after awhile found myself not
caring about my appearance. Basically, I would just roll out of bed and go
to school in shorts and a t-shirt.
After some time, I got the opportunity to
have a new beginning at a different school, and the Lord started to work
on my thinking. He had given me the understanding that being sensitive was
a very good thing as long as I was sensitive to Him and allowed Him to
control my thoughts and actions. When a tough situation would come up, I
would ask the Lord how He wanted me to handle it. I started to realize the
need to filter my thoughts through Him. He changed my thinking, and the
changed thinking caused changed actions.
During that time in my life, I heard a
message at church that if we try to take control of a situation, we limit
what the Lord can do—but if we allow Him to have complete control, then He
is an unlimited God on our behalf. I started to let the Lord show me how
to relate to my peers, and He showed me how to be outgoing in a positive
way in my relationships. Through this change in my life, I started to feel
better about myself.
When I look back on those memories, I see how
the Lord had allowed tough situations to come my way to produce patience
in me. By relying upon His presence in my life and asking for wisdom, I
have changed from an unstable and double-minded person to one who displays
the Lord’s confidence in my life.
My brethren count it all joy when you fall
into various trials, knowing that the testing of your faith produces
patience. But let patience have its perfect work, that you may be perfect
and complete, lacking nothing. If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask of
God, who gives to all liberally and without reproach, and it will be given
to him. But let him ask in faith, with no doubting, for he who doubts is
like a wave of the sea driven and tossed by the wind. For let not that man
suppose that he will receive anything from the Lord; he is a
double-minded man, unstable in all his ways
(James 1:2-8).
Amanda Bears is a
member of Power House and is a financial sales representative at UMB Bank
in Springfield, Missouri.

Walk—Don’t Run
By Janissa Hole
My spiritual journey
reminds me of building a house—one has to lay the foundation first and
build slow and steady, and the foundation has to be strong for the house
to be strong. My spiritual foundation is formed by me receiving God’s
truth, meditating on it, renewing my mind to it, and making the necessary
changes in my life. The Lord has been
teaching me that He is unchanging. However, I’m learning that I
am changeable. I have the ability to change to be more like Christ
every day.
A few weeks ago, I found
a journal that I hadn’t written in for a few years. As I thumbed through
it, I was amazed at the great changes God has accomplished in me. Slowly
but surely, He has been changing me into the image of His Son.
The following journal
entry indicates where I was in 2003:
Sometimes I wonder, wonder if I’ll ever
really be okay. Being sick sucks. Yesterday I flipped out on my friend and
cried for probably 30 minutes off and on. I was okay at one minute and the
next started crying again. I don’t understand; I am taking my meds, why
aren’t they helping me that much? I would be afraid to see what I would be
like if I weren’t on any meds at all. Sometimes I want to take extra pills
so I don’t have to feel anything.
When I get depressed like this, I think
about the bad things that have happened to me, but I suppress the events
and just remember how it made me feel... I know I need counseling but it
costs money and that’s something I am really short on. I really want to
get a second job. Maybe that will help me keep my mind off of everything
else going on.
Reflecting on how I use
to feel and think just a few years ago was a real wake up call. I thought
back to what had led up to this very depressed, confused, and destructive
state. It was a series of not very significant compromises.
When I was a teenager in
high school, I had a very close walk with God. I was active in our youth
group and knew right from wrong. When I was 19, we left our hometown, and
I moved in with my aunt in a different town than where my mom and siblings
lived. I had fewer rules and stipulations. I started a new job and made
friends with people my own age who were not Christians. I did not get
reestablished in a church home. I was out of my normal routine and did
not make the right choices.
Eventually, I started
going to parties that involved heavy drinking, smoking pot, and
cigarettes. I began thinking that clubbing and partying was the way to go.
At the age of 20, my life started going downhill—extremely fast. My
life seemed out of control, and I felt like I was going nowhere. I began
hanging around with people who did methamphetamines. I moved into my own
apartment, and one of the guys I hung out with needed a place to stay so I
invited him to stay with me. After he moved in with me, he quit working;
soon money got really tight, and I couldn’t meet my bills. I lost my
apartment. I began doing things I said I would never do, and some things I
never even thought of doing. I ended up getting in trouble with the law,
twice. I chose the life of the world, and I am still serving a five-year
probation with the law.
After all these wrong
choices and suffering the consequences of those choices, I was labeled
with a mental illness: bi-polar with schizoaffective disorder. I was
admitted to the psychiatric floor of the hospital, twice. I felt I had
hundreds of voices talking in my head all at once. I would even cut my
body just to relieve the pain in my mind. I saw things that weren’t there.
I heard things that didn’t exist. I went to no less than ten doctors and
ended up on nine different medications simultaneously. It was during this
time that I made the above journal entry.
The Lord brought me to a
place where I had no choice but to give up. I surrendered my life back to
God. I was able to begin decreasing my medications and believed that if I
would continue to obey Him I would be completely healed. Since October
2005, I have been medication free!
I began a new entry in
my journal:
It’s been a few years since I wrote in
this journal but I found it and thought it would be a good idea to start
writing again. A lot has changed since 2003, but good has come from it
all. I love God so much! I usually find myself writing about some guy I
have a crush on or I think I love. But now it’s all about my Father God.
He is so amazing and great! He has done so much for me. Tonight at Power
House, He healed me from my strong independent will. Now my will is His. I
don’t want control anymore. I am tired of driving and wrecking. It’s time
to grow up in Him.
Ever since I have built
my foundation with the Lord as my rock and have walked with Him, I could
not be happier! I can see that there was purpose in my pain; it has
brought me to where I am today.
Janissa Hole is a member
of Power House and a manager at Sonic Drive-in Restaurant in Springfield,
Missouri.

POWER HOUSE
Bears Mall
National & Grand, Suite H
A new ministry that targets 18
to 25-year-olds is gearing up for the upcoming school year. Students,
graduates, and those on career paths that may not currently include
college are welcome.
Power House is a
transdenominational ministry that gives attendees a sense of family. The
power of the Holy Spirit is present in our in-depth Bible studies, times
of prayer and praise, and in our daily lives. Come study, do research,
receive counseling, and/or just hang out with like-minded people.
Some summer activities are planned, and meetings will be held Tuesdays and
Sundays @ 7:00 p.m. starting August 15th. Call 881-9777 for
more details.