Tag Archives: hopeforlife.org

HopeForLife.org video testimonial: Tammy Marcelain

Along with our website revamp, Herald of Truth has produced a number of new videos. These are available on www.hopeforlife.org, but we are also releasing them on video sites like YouTube.com. Here’s the first testimonial that we’ve posted there:

You can help us get the word out about these videos. Go to where this video is on YouTube.com (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5nGNsiZiqfs) and leave a comment and/or rating there. And tell others about these videos. The story of how God has changed someone’s life is a powerful thing.

(Edit, 8:48 a.m. — I was remiss in not mentioning the WONDERFUL job that Tim Frakes did in filming these videos. An outstanding artist with a heart for Jesus)

HopeForLife.org revamp

HopeForLife.orgSomething I’ve been waiting for for two years: we’ve done a major revamp of our HopeForLife.org website. (“our” being Herald of Truth) Special thanks to Tamie Ross for recommending web designer Travis Langley. He’s done an outstanding job for us.

The site is designed as an outreach site, although I think Christians will also find encouragement there. It’s built around a four-part presentation of the good news:

  • There is hope.
  • Hope is found in God.
  • Jesus is the way to God.
  • You can choose this life of hope.

One of the key parts of the site is the profiles page, with 10 video testimonials. I think you’ll be moved by the stories you see and hear there. There are also some written resources, 2 Bible study courses, and a contact page where people can ask for help finding a church, request prayers, or ask a question.

I’d like to ask you to take a look at the site and let me know what you think. I’d especially like to ask you to try and watch a video or two. We are trying the VideoPress video presentation plug-in; it delivers high quality video, but some people have had trouble watching the videos because of what that quality defends. Try the videos and let me know if they work for you.

Cuba, March 2009: Final thoughts

I won’t bore you with the details of our trip home from Cuba. The most exciting moment was when the card reader at the airport parking lot refused to return my American Express card. After waiting 15-20 minutes, I ended up getting 4 days of parking for free.

I wanted to share one more thing from what we experienced in Cuba. Last year, I wrote about a special baptism that we had in Matanzas. A lady who only has one leg came forward to be baptized. joyThe look of joy on her face after her baptism taught me a lot about what really matters in life. I wrote about that on the HopeForLife.org blog, in an article called “The Healing.”

I was thrilled to get to see this lady again. She had that same smile on her face, though she is obviously still in poor health. As we talked, she told me something that broke my heart. She mentioned that the wheelchair she was using was borrowed. She casually said, “I get tired of having to drag myself around the house.” Oh, my!

p3280209Now, I don’t doubt that she mentioned that to me in hopes that I could do something. And I plan to find out if anything can be done. From what she told me, I don’t even know if we can get a wheelchair in Cuba. But what I want to tell you is this: her faith doesn’t depend on her being healed. It doesn’t even depend on her getting a wheelchair. She has the joy of the Lord in her present situation, horrible though it is.

Anybody feel like complaining today?

Home again, home again

pink-cloudsOK, we made it home from Argentina, physically, at least. The week before we left, there was a four-hour difference between Abilene and Córdoba. Then, on the day we left, the U.S. started Daylight Savings, cutting the difference to three hours at the cost of an hour’s sleep. We then flew all night, spent over 24 hours traveling and arrived exhausted (but happy) to Córdoba. We spent a busy week, then gained an hour’s sleep when Argentina started their Daylight Savings (cutting the difference to two hours). We flew all night, did the long trip home, and now we’re back. It was quite a week.

Enough to keep me from being able to write anything coherent. (Just see the above paragraph, if you don’t believe me). So, if you’re just dying to read something brilliant I’ve written, my article is up today on Heartlight. You can read it best on our HopeforLife blog: http://hopeforlife.org/blog/entry.asp?ENTRY_ID=82

The Gain is Worth the Pain

[While we’re traveling in Argentina, I thought I’d post some of the things that I’ve written for the HopeForLife.org blog; they’ve also been posted to Heartlight. Comments are moderated until I get back; sorry about that folks. Some people don’t know how to play nice.]

I was about 9 years old. I was taking Red Cross swimming lessons at our municipal pool. The day had arrived when I was to be tested to see if I could advance from the Advanced Beginners class to the Intermediate class. Approximately fifteen of us were to take turns swimming from one side of the pool to the other and back, doing various strokes and exercises along the way. I watched as my classmates one by one tried and failed to pass the test. Then it was my turn to fail, I mean, my turn to attempt to pass the test. I got about halfway across the pool when I felt that burning sensation you feel when chlorinated water enters your nose. I immediately stopped and grabbed the side of the pool, ending my test.

One of the instructors was standing above me, a scraggly-haired college student. “Why did you stop?” he yelled, in a less-than-compassionate voice.

“I got water in my nose,” I explained.

That’s when this scruffy college student taught me one of life’s great lessons, even if he probably never realized he was doing just that. Bending down, he shouted, “So?”

So? The question took me aback. It had just seemed logical to me that the answer to pain was to eliminate the thing causing the discomfort. My 9-year-old brain had not latched onto the fact that a valuable goal is worth achieving even if we have to go through discomfort to get there. Recognizing that, I wasn’t sure what would keep me from completing the test. In fact, I did it rather easily on my next attempt. Seeing me pass the test, almost all of the others did so as well.

At times I think Jesus lovingly says “So?” to so many of the things that seem important to me. The obstacles, the hardships, the barriers that appear along the way can’t be compared to the goal that waits at the end. We have to focus on the final destination, not the bumps in the road. The apostle Paul wrote: “I consider that our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us” (Romans 8:18). God’s plan for us is not to eliminate suffering in our lives, but to teach us to look past it. When Paul and his companion Barnabas were visiting churches they had started, they told them, “We must go through many hardships to enter the kingdom of God” (Acts 14:22). The night before the crucifixion, Jesus told his disciples: “I have told you these things, so that in me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world” (John 16:33).

If you’re not a Christian, it’s only fair that we warn you that the road won’t always be easy. But I can assure you that the goal is more than worth any difficulties we might face along the way. I’d like to tell you more about living above the hardships of life, with our eyes focused on the goal.

www.hopeforlife.org

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