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" Right
to the Heart of Women" —the EZINE
for women who touch the hearts of
other women
June 2003 |
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There’s
Something about Susan…
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Imagine Sister Susan, a women’s ministry
director whom God has given a complete shopping cart of spiritual gifts.
Susan is so gifted she makes the Proverbs 31 woman look anemic. How
would you feel about Susan if she lacked love, wisdom, and obedience?
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Imagine Susan orchestrating great outreaches for her church. Yet
according to 1Corinthians 13, if she does not love, she is like
a clanging bell. For action without love is nothing and gains nothing.
Compare Susan with a Lowly Lola. Lola is a sweet lady, but her
spiritual gifts are few and not very flashy. Lola says she actually
has to rely on God’s grace to accomplish what little she does!
Where’s the glory in that? But Lola knows how to love and that
she does very well. When she stuffs envelopes for the women’s retreat,
she does it unto God. Although she’s not a gifted teacher, she
helps with the two-year-olds at Sunday school. Susan may teach
the class, but it’s Lola who loves the tots.
Perhaps it would be better to compare Susan to another member
of the church: Wanda Wit. Compared to Susan, Wanda is hardly gifted
at all, but she is very wise. She and Susan disagreed the other
day about the women’s retreat. Wanda feels the speaker should be
a Christian rather than a New Age guru. Wanda doesn’t like to fight,
but she will encourage the committee to make a wise choice.
Compare our gifted Susan to Opal Okay. Unlike Susan, who is too
busy, Opal has a daily quiet time. Opal listens for God’s voice
and tries to abide in His Presence through prayer and reading her
Bible. When God calls her to a project He anoints her to accomplish
it. Yes, she actually finishes what she starts, unlike Susan who
has her fingers in so many pies that she only does whatever will
bring her the most admiration.
I think we get the point here. Let’s not be envious of the gifts
that God gives others, but let’s develop love, wisdom and obedience
in our character.
As 1Peter 4:10 – 11 says: “Each one should use whatever
gift he has received to serve others, faithfully administering
God's grace in its various forms. If anyone speaks, he should do
it as one speaking the very words of God. If anyone serves, he
should do it with the strength God provides, so that in all things
God may be praised through Jesus Christ. “ NIV
Ah! Now that is love, wisdom and obedience all wrapped up into
one big service to others. What a gift!
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Are you hearing the call of God on your life but are puzzled how
to respond? Are you searching for a way to use your spiritual giftedness?
Do
you want to hone the ministry skills that you already have? Then
you need to attend |
the Right to the Heart of Women Conference
June 20 - 21 in Indianapolis, Indiana. This two-day event will
help you become equipped and empowered as a dynamic, anointed servant
leader!
Unlike any conference you have ever attended, Right
to the Heart of Women Conference will help you discern what God
wants to do with your life and give you direction. Taught by women
who have been where you are and understand your questions and circumstances,
you will find encouragement and solid, Spirit-filled teaching.
For more information, please check out the following link: https://righttotheheart.com/women/conf03.htm |
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True Confessions
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Using my spiritual gifts can get me into trouble.
For example: Not long ago, my family pulled into our driveway and
found three burly teenagers standing on the back porch. Since
one of my gifts
is hospitality, I immediately thought, “These guys must be some of
my sons’ friends that I don’t know. No matter! I just baked chocolate
chip cookies and I have smoked turkey in the refrigerator. I’ll invite
them in and we’ll get acquainted.” So, awash with cordiality, I sprang
from the car, hustled the boys through the kitchen door and tried
to give them cookies and sandwiches.
In all my years of feeding multitudes of teenagers, I had never
before met boys who refused to eat! Not only did they refuse to talk
(kind of strange) or eat (very strange!), they were in a great hurry
to leave. I’ll confess that I was puzzled and a little hurt — until
a few minutes later when we discovered that our “guests” were actually
three disconcerted burglars waiting on a truck to load up the contents
our house!
While I’ve had a hard time living this down, it isn’t the first
time that I have “misfired” my spiritual gifts.
For example: Misusing the gift of exhortation, I’ve turned an ill-prepared
Sunday school teacher into a theological pretzel — just because I thought
he deserved it for not studying the lesson.
Or misusing compassion, I’ve become the person “in the know.”
Or misusing discernment, I’ve torn the scab off of someone’s secret
sin.
Or misusing prophecy, I’ve singed the hide of someone who irritated
me.
Oh yes! My Heavenly Father has definitely disciplined me! He continues
to hammer into my rather thick skull that His gifts are to be used
appropriately and ONLY according to His instructions. He has also
reminded me that misuse of spiritual gifts is the same reason that
thinking parents don’t give 16-year-old birthday boys red convertible
sports cars: it can wreck people!
God longs to gift individuals for the purpose of building His Church
and reaching the lost. Whether He does or not is a matter of fulfilling
His purpose and His ability to trust us.
I have heard the late Kathryn Coleman prayed, “Trust me! Trust
me! Trust me!” bef ore
she stepped onto the platform. Regardless of what you think of her
theology, the Holy Spirit was powerfully manifested through her gifts.
Can God trust you to use your spiritual gifts rightly? We hope
that this issue of the ezine will help you use your spiritual gifts
to reach Right to the Heart of Women.
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Need just the right phrase to make the point? Try these! |
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None
of us suddenly becomes something overnight. The preparations have
been in the making for a lifetime.
— Gail Godwin
To put it bluntly, people have had their bellyful of our sermonizing.
They want a source of strength for their lives.
We can recommend it only by making it actively present in our own. |
— Brennan Manning
The church has too many crowd-pleasers already. We have more than
enough people who can bring television and radio audiences, congregations,
and class members to their feet. What we need is a bumper crop
of believers who are content to play to an audience of One.
— Tony Evans
If we could learn to pray first and plan afterward how different
would be our homes, our churches, our Christian women’s clubs,
our Bible studies, whatever we are doing for Christ. Maybe, just
maybe, we are planning in one direction and God’s will is in another
direction.
— Evelyn Christenson
God does not open paths for us in advance of our coming. He does
not promise help before help is needed. He does not remove obstacles
out of our way before we reach
them, Yet when we are on the edge of our need, God’s hand is stretched
out.
— J. R. M.
People want the front of the bus, back of the church and center
of attention.
— Anonymous
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It’s
All About Him
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When the feelings come my way, I know
them instantly these days. The prick of jealousy. The darkness of
self-doubt at another’s success.
The drive to compare and compete… All directed toward my sisters
or brothers in Christ as we exercise our gifts.
When the feelings surface, that’s my red flag to stop what I’m
doing and get before the Lord. Now! Lest I waste another day of
eternal opportunities, like I wasted the first 30 years of my life.
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If you’ve ever experienced spring in the Midwest—where one day is 75
degrees with the warm sun soaking into your skin, and the next day
it is snowing and you are bone-cold—you know the difference in serving
Christ or serving yourself with your gifts. Though my good works appeared
as “service to God,” I spent years being utterly self-serving. Promoting
my name rather than Christ’s. It is a grief that I will carry with
me to my grave. But it is also my reality check today.
It’s very easy as women of influence within the church to see ourselves
through human eyes. To deem our service and gifts as acceptable to
God because they look good to others or are getting “results.” But
how’s your heart? Ask yourself:
* Am I focused on faithfulness or success?
* Would I keep using my gifts in this way even if nobody ever acknowledged
me?
* Do I get caught up in what others can do and forget what God has empowered
me to do?
* Am I called to this area of service by God, or am I driven by my own
ambitious agenda?
The worship leader at my church consistently
reminds her team: “It’s not about you or me; it’s about ministry.”
If that truth is always in focus for you, then pray for the rest
of us! But if you’re still learning to give up yourself in your service,
hold onto the hope of Christ and your dream of change. For the God
who blooms flowers from a covering of snow in a Midwest May is also
in the business of turning hearts of stone into hearts of flesh that
beat for Him.
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Reader’s question: “I’m so discouraged! As long
as I can remember, I felt ‘called’ to be a writer. I don’t think I misunderstood
God, but publishers are rather cool toward my manuscripts and the few
articles that I’ve had published have not been well received. Should
I quit?”
Writes Rebekah Montgomery:
Writing is a profession where discouragement can become a major issue,
but it is important to decide up front that your success won’t be based
on your audience’s reception to your work but on whether or not you
delivered God’s message. For example:
Jeremiah's publisher, the king of Israel, liked his manuscript
so much that he imprisoned him in a dry well. Only when the king
was in the most desperate straits did he haul the prophet up for
a speaking engagement. After he heard Jeremiah speak, he was so
appreciative that he put him back in the dry well — presumably
for safe keeping.
Ezekiel's readers loved his writings! During a reading (and scroll
signing?), they mobbed him and beat his head in — a different sort
of rave review.
After Isaiah's publisher, a king, read his manuscript, he had
Isaiah stuffed in a stump and sawn in half.
After James the brother of Jesus wrote his book, he was promptly
beheaded.
John, the beloved, wrote four books, which were received with
such accolades that he was awarded chain jewelry and a trip to
a Mediterranean island — Patmos — where he wrote his final book:
the Revelation.
Paul was a self-published author. As was Matthew, a tax collector/accountant
turned writer, and so many others.
I’m not sure any of these notable writers would have been signed
with an agent or be lauded by a publisher. And probably their royalty
checks were mailed directly to their heavenly mansions, but they
were undeniably some of the most successful writers or all time.
Let me encourage you to do four additional things:
- Fast, pray, and study. Pray over every single word.
- Hone your craft. Study writing styles and develop one that
clearly communicates the message.
- Join a Christian writers support group. AWSA (Advanced Writers
and Speakers Association), one of the ministries of Right to
the Heart, is just one of many support groups. Do a web search
and you may be surprised what you find.
- Above all, don’t fool yourself into believing that financial
remuneration measures God’s approval on your writing. Paul was
a tremendous evangelist, but from time to time, he made tents
with Priscilla and Aquilla to make ends meet. You may have to
do the same, but it does not mean your writing is bad. It only
means that God is giving you more experience from which to draw
and widening your sphere of influence.
Do you have a question
that you’d like addressed by AWSA (Advanced
Writers and Speakers Association)? Email your question to rmontgomery@rebekahmontgomery.com.
Your anonymity will be protected.
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…
in planning programs …
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Writes Jeanne
Zornes:
At one retreat where I spoke, the communion time was preceded by a craft time
in which women created from clay something that symbolized something in their
lives. As we went around the room explaining our creations, some of the deep
issues in women's lives emerged. One, for example, crafted a closed rosebud,
saying she doesn't feel ready to bloom for Christ yet.
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From there we moved into a time of self-examination.
We were invited, in small groups, to wash one another's hands (after
the clay activity) as a sacred service to one another, then given
the communion elements and dismissed outside to partake alone as
we communed with God.
…
in presenting a message …
Writes Linda McGinn:
When I first started speaking 20 years ago I would experience anguish if a
message didn't seem all I felt it should be, but then it seemed the Lord
spoke to my heart. His Holy Spirit is the teacher, He knows the heart of
every woman in the room, and He transforms my meager words to be the message
each woman needs if I trust Him to guide me. It amazes me the stories that
will suddenly come to mind when I am speaking which when I share them will
be the very thing that touches a woman's heart. I often forget I even said
some things when women come up to tell me that a particular thing I said
had the greatest impact.
When I finish, I pray that He will remove anything from the audience’s
minds that is not of Him but of my flesh and cause them to remember
what He wants them to hear.
So much about speaking for God is the realization that though we
do desire to prepare and be faithful, it's not our performance that
makes any difference; it's His communication of His message through
us that matters. I often think of John the Baptist words, "He
must increase and I must decrease." Also: "Apart from Him
we can do nothing."
God uses whatever yielded vessel He finds, even if He can only find
a donkey as in Balaam's case
…
in presenting a Bible study …
Kristy Dykes writes:
Women, married or single, need Biblical instruction on husband/wife relationships.
With this in mind, the wise program planner will occasionally have a speaker
address this topic, thus fulfilling Titus 2:3, 4: “The older women likewise,
that they be reverent in behavior, not slanderers, not given to much wine,
teachers of good things--that they admonish (or teach) the younger women
to love their husbands” (NKJV).
So, how do we teach women to love their husbands? Here are six Biblical
ways:
- RESPECT HIM. "And the wife must see to it that she
deeply respects her husband--obeying, praising, and honoring him" (Ephesians
5:33, LB). Respect means, “to consider worthy of high regard.”
Quick Tip: Don't "talk down" to him or make fun of him.
- BE HIS CHEERLEADER! "And the Lord God said, It is
not good for the man to be alone. I will make a helper suitable
for him" (Genesis 2:18, NIV). Quick Tip: Encourage and honestly
compliment him.
- SUBMIT TO HIM AS YOUR HEAD. "Wives, fit in with your
husbands' plans" (I Peter 3:1, LB). True Biblical submission
means, "to graciously cooperate with the headship of your
home." Quick Tip: Learn to be assertive without being rebellious.
- OVERLOOK HIS FAULTS AND CONCENTRATE ON HIS PLUS POINTS. "Love
will cover a multitude of sins" (1 Peter 4:8, NKJV). Quick
Tip: Remind yourself of his good points continually.
- RESPOND TO HIS SEXUAL NEEDS. "Because of the temptation
of immorality, each man should have his own wife and each woman
her own husband. The husband should give to his wife her conjugal
rights, and likewise, the wife to her own husband. For the wife
does not rule over her own body, but the husband does; likewise
the husband does not rule over his own body, but the wife does.
Do not refuse one another..." (I Corinthians 7:2-5, RSV).
Quick Tip: Be knowledgeable about sexuality, which God created.
Read the two classics, The Act of Marriage by Tim LaHaye and Intended
for Pleasure by Dr. Ed Wheat. Above all, ask the Lord to help you
in this area.
- DON'T LOOK TO HIM FOR YOUR HAPPINESS. "...in thy
presence is fullness of joy" (Psalm 16:11, KJV). Always remember:
lasting happiness comes only from the Lord. Quick Tip: Look to
the Lord for your joy and encouragement, not your husband.
You may contribute to What
Works by emailing rmontgomery@rebekahmontgomery.com.
If we use your program or ministry tip, you will receive a
FREE book of our choice. |
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Full
Potential
By
Golden Keyes Parsons
The full potential of a church, or the life of the individual believer,
cannot be realized fully until there is an understanding of spiritual
gifts. How do we discern what special abilities God has given us to serve
in the Body of Christ?
- DESIRE —Get to work in the church. Serve by setting up chairs,
teach a children’s class, volunteer to head up a committee, learn how
to evangelize. Follow your inclinations and determine what you enjoy
doing. The Holy Spirit will energize and anoint the gift within you.
You will begin to lean toward the gift that “fits” you
- DEVELOP —Study the gifts. Determine which characteristics describe
you and begin to try out the gift you feel you may possess. If you
feel you could have the gift of evangelism, witness to your neighbors.
You don’t have to be a big name evangelist. You can begin teaching
children if you feel you might have the gift of teaching. Do you feel
a calling to the mission field? You might have the gift of apostle.
Study about missions and go on short-term mission projects. Begin to
develop the gift within you.
- DELIGHT —As you develop the spiritual gift God has given you,
the peace of God will descend upon you. You will delight in serving
in the area of your gifting. The opposite will prove true, as well.
When you are not serving in the area of your gifting, you will feel
restless.
- DISCERNMENT —As you exercise your spiritual gift, others will
be edified and strengthened. They will make comments like – “Your lesson
inspired me.” (Gift of teaching). “I wish I could have compassion for
the poor like you do.” (Gift of mercy). “You are so generous and giving.”
(Gift of giving). Sometimes others discern our gifts even before we
do.
This is an old example, but one that may help us grasp the basic motivational
gifts. Suppose a woman was walking across the fellowship hall with a
tray of pies and dropped it. The person with the gift of mercy would
exclaim, “Oh, don’t feel badly. That could have happened to anyone.”
(Empathizes with the feelings of the woman.)
The one with the gift of service would run to the kitchen and get towels
to clean up the mess. (Wants to physically fulfill a need.)
The prophet would say, “That’s what happens when you aren’t careful!”
(Motivated to correct the problem.)
The teacher would say, “The reason that it fell is that it was to heavy
on one side.” (Wants to discover why it happened.)
The exhorter would say, “Next time maybe we’d better serve dessert with
the meal.” (Desires to encourage by formulating a plan for the future.)
The giver would say, “I’ll go buy some more dessert.” (Would like to
give to a tangible need.)
The organizer would say, “Joe, go get a mop. Sue, please help pick
it up. Mary, could you start making another pie?” (Wants to lead in reaching
the goals of the group.)
Spiritual gifts are for serving in the Body of Christ. Let’s be diligent
in discovering and exercising those gifts God has given us. |
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Intimate
Moments with God — Personal Stories from Women Sharing
the Scriptures that Changed Their Lives
Compiled by Linda Evans Shepherd and Eva Marie Everson
Honor Books: ISBN 1-56292-498-2: $12.99 pbk. 227 pages
You know their names and faces, but likely as not you do
not know their secret heartaches and struggles. Top writers
and speakers step out from behind their professional personas
and let you see into the crisis moments in their lives and
how God used them to transform. A remarkably candid look
at how God used those very human and vulnerable moments in
98 stories by approximately 50 authors.
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A
Sure Path — Moving Ahead with Christ When We’d Rather Settle
Down in the World
By Susan Scott Sutton
Kregel Publications: ISBN 0-8254-3661-3: $10.99 pbk. 203 pages
This twelve-chapter book looks minutely at the walk of faith
by using personal anecdotes, quotes, and Scripture. The author
uses the metaphor of the pilgrim’s journey to describe the
spiritual journey of a follower of Christ and would make
an excellent basis for a group study or private devotional.
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A
Greater Glory
By James Scott Bell
Bethany House: ISBN 0-7642-2645-2: $12.99 pbk. 301 pages
The protagonist, Kit Shannon, is not the typical violet-eyed
damsel panting for romance. Rather, she is bright, spirited,
and nobody’s fool. Part of a series set in the early 1900’s,
the young attorney defends a woman with a dark past, but
an underlying theme of the book is the debunking of spiritualism
— an old deception that is reappearing today. This book would
be a good read for a mature believer, but a good tool for
a seeker as well.
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Twenty
Life Transforming Choices Adoptees Need to Make
By Sherrie Eldridge
Pinon Press: ISBN 1-57683-307-0: $19.99 hardcover 287 pages
Even if you are not adopted or have a adopted child, you
will find this book to be riveting. A skilled writer, Sherri
Eldridge takes the reader on an emotional roller coaster
ride through the range of positives and negatives concerning
adoption. Laying down 20 truths and 20 choices, adoptees
are challenged to look realistically at their unique life
path and recognize that while they had no choice in their
past, they can chose their future. If you counsel adoptees
or girl and women considering adoption, this book is a must
for your library.
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CONTRIBUTING
AUTHORS
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Rebekah Montgomery has
over 30 years experience as a pastor/teacher. She is the
author of six books, numerous magazine and newspaper articles,
camp and Bible school curriculum, and was editor of 8 nationally
known magazines. In addition to editing Right
to the Heart of Women, Mrs. Montgomery writes
a five-times-a-week e-mail inspirational column, Fresh News
From Heaven. She speaks on a variety of subjects. Contact
her at rmontgomery@rebekahmontgomery.com. |
Kris Bearss is
a veteran speaker, publishing professional and longtime
mentor, Kris Bearss has written three books and dozens
of articles. She is the Editorial Director at Integrity
Publishers in Brentwood, TN, and is publisher of Leading
Women™, a mentor-in-print that seeks to develop, equip
and sustain Christian women in all arenas of leadership.
To receive a free issue or to contact her to speak to your
group, write to kdbearss@juno.com or
P.O. Box 111, Brentwood, TN 37024-0111. |
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Golden Keyes
Parson is a Bible teacher who challenges women
to live extraordinary lives. She is a trained CLASS speaker
and writer who enjoys speaking at women's events and
also leads marriage conferences along with her husband,
Blaine. They both minister at Faith Mountain Fellowship
Church in Red River, NM. You can reach her at GPar0719@aol.com
or call her at 505-754-1742. |
Sherrie Eldridge is
founder and president of the adoption educational organization
Jewel Among Jewels Adoption Network, Inc. (www.adoptionjewels.org)
She is also the author of the highly-acclaimed book Twenty
Things Adopted Kids Wish Their Adoptive Parents Knew and Twenty
Life-Transforming Choices Adoptees Need to Make. |
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Kristy Dykes a native
Floridian, she is an award-winning author, speaker,
and former newspaper columnist. She’s taught at many conferences
and two colleges, and she enjoys speaking for women's events.
She serves on the Publications Advisory Board of Woman’s Touch
magazine and has written almost 600 published articles for
many publications including two New York Times’s subsidiaries,
Guideposts Angels, etc. She also writes Christian fiction.
American Dream and Sweet Liberty (Barbour Publishing) are now
in Christian bookstores, and two more will soon follow.Through
her writing, Kristy desires to “put a smile on your face, a
tear in your eye, and a glow in your heart.”
She can be reached at:
kristydykes@aol.com or 904.725.1493 |
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Linda McGinn: National
speaker, author, Bible teacher, and gifted communicator, Linda
McGinn is motivated by a desire to see women develop greater intimacy
with God and fulfill His purposes for their lives. Her organization,"Out
of the Box" Ministries provides innovative solutions that equip
women to
realize their full potential in Christ. You can reach Linda at
lrmcginn@cs.com. |
Jeanne Zornes balances
humor, stories of growth and compassion, and Biblical principles
as an approachable, caring speaker with an award-winning publishing
background. Author of hundreds of articles, she's in twenty
compilations and has seven books of her own: Spiritual Spandex
for the Outstretched Soul; When I Felt Like Ragweed, God Saw
a Rose; When I Got on the Highway to Heaven, I Didn't Expect
Rocky Roads; When I Prayed for Patience...God Let Me Have It!;
Homemaker Helper; Living Laughing and Loving Life (with Dan
Miller); and Patchwork Family. She won the 1999 "Pacesetter
Award" of the Mount Hermon Christian Writers Conference
and the 2000 Heritage Keepers/NavPress "Woman of Influence" essay
contest. A CLASS speaker, she holds a master's from Wheaton
Graduate School and a Bible certificate from Multnomah, and
is a former writer/editor for newspapers, magazines (including
Moody), book publishers, and Wycliffe Bible Translators. She's
also wife of a retired teacher, mother of a college-age son
and daughter, and a member of the Wenatchee (Wash.) Free Methodist
Church. |
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Heart (TM) Productions. Right
to the Heart is a 501 (c) 3 nonprofit ministry which specializes
in encouragement through the daily one-minute radio program, hosted
by Linda Evans Shepherd, as a nationally syndicated feature. For more
information on the radio feature, please visit https://righttotheheart.com
- Please pray for the multi-facets
of this ministry (administration, finances, radio, conferences, books,
events, online loops, and newsletters.)
- Pray that we will have
an impact on women for Christ and that God will complete the work
He has called us to do.
- Pray the radio ministry
will have an impact for Christ and lives will be touched and changed.
- Pray for Linda and her
family.
- Pray for the health care
professionals who help care for Linda's invalid daughter.
- Pray for the people who
work for and with this organization.
- Pray for our nation and
pray God will replace EVIL with REVIVAL.
Please email if you would
like to join Linda's prayer team.
COPYRIGHT notice:
Submission of an e-mail message affirms that you are able to and
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in all languages throughout the world. Copyright 2002, Right
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Right to the Heart of Women to others!
If you are
Christian women author who has published at least two books that
appear in Amazon.com and you speak across state lines at least three
times a year, consider joining AWSA (Advanced
Writers and Speakers Association). Go to righttotheheart.com
and click on author and follow the prompts for an application. THANK
YOU FOR READING TO THE END!
Blessings,
Linda Evans Shepherd (C) Right to the
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