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How
to Turn Your Greatest Weakness into Your Greatest Strength
I was sitting in Los Angeles airport
waiting to fly to Nashville, and offered a tract to
a large man who was sitting two seats away from me.
He coldly said, "Keep it." I put it back in my pocket
and then offered him another tract. Most take this one
if they refuse the first. It looks like a business card,
but it says, "Department
of Annoyance...Director." It makes the first offer
make sense. I deepen my voice and say, "This is where
I'm from..." and hand it to them. The air of authority
makes them take it, and almost everyone laughs when
they see the "annoyance" part. Not this man. He just
said, "Keep it." A moment later he got up and left and
a younger man took his seat.
I have learned that if someone throws
you off, you have to find another horse and get right
back into the saddle. So I ignored my sense of rejection
and the fear of it happening a second time, and I slid
a million
dollar bill across the seat, saying, "Here's a million
dollars for you...it's great when you get the change."
This man burst out laughing. That made me feel good,
so I asked, "Where are you from?" He was from Texas
and he was going back home for his father's surprise
fiftieth birthday party. He had been in Los Angeles
for five months pursuing an acting career, working as
a waiter in a Hollywood hotel.
I told him that I co-hosted a TV program
with the actor Kirk Cameron. When he said that he had
actually seen the program, I asked if he'd had a Christian
background. "Catholic." I asked, "Have you been 'born
again'--do you know what that means?" He answered, "That's
when you believe that Jesus died on the cross for you
and you ask Him into your heart. I believe all that."
I explained that the difference between believing that
Jesus died for you and trusting in Him was like the
difference between believing in a parachute and putting
it on. I said, "You know what helped me? It was this
little test--Would you consider yourself to be a good
person?" He said that he did, so I took him through
the Ten Commandments." He had lied, but when I asked
him what that made him, he said a predictable "Human."
We live in an age of unaccountability. It's the "It's
not my fault" age. Adrian was only 'human.' He had weaknesses
like every other human being and was therefore not really
accountable. But the truth is, every man will give an
account of himself to God, and this is why each Christian
needs to be like Nathan the Prophet and say, "You are
the man!" and one way to do that is to have the person
acknowledge what they are. I said to Adrian, "What would
you call me if I told blatant lies?" He said, "A liar."
We both smiled when I said that it sure is easier to
see other people's sins. He had also stolen, blasphemed
and looked with lust. Yet, he still thought that he
would go to Heaven, so I explained the justice of God
to him, then the cross.
He soberly said, "That made me think."
I then explained that I had addressed his conscience
rather than his intellect. I said, "It does make us
think, because the conscience agrees with each of the
Commandments. If I told you that I had a cure to lymph
node cancer, and gave it to you, you would probably
say, "What are you doing? What do I want this for?"
But if I instead took the time to convince you that
you had the disease, when I offered you the cure, you
are going to appreciate it.
We then prayed together. I gave him
my email address, a "Hell's
Best Kept Secret" CD, a copy of "The
Way of the Master" private screening, a copy of
The
Evidence Bible, and a book I had written called,
101 Things Husbands do to Annoy Their Wives
to give to his dad for his birthday. He was so grateful
that I had spoken to him, and I was so thankful that
I didn't listen to my fears.
On the flight to Nashville, I sat
next to a 78 year-old man named Earl, and his wife Helen.
I felt a twinge of fear because I respect older men
and feel a little uncomfortable telling them what they
should and shouldn't be doing. I said that I was an
author and handed Helen a complimentary copy of, 101
Things Husbands do to Annoy Their Wives. Earl
and I then chatted about his background. I then I told
him that I was going to speak at a Christian conference,
and asked if he had a Christian background? He said
that he was an "unbeliever," and laughed.
I asked if he ever thought about his
mortality--the fact that he was going to die. "Not much."
I said, "You know what helped me? It was the Ten Commandments,"
and shared with him about lust being adultery, etc.
I said that if God saw my thought-life and He was going
to judge me by that standard, I would end up in Hell,
not Heaven. His reaction was to smile and say, "You
know how I deal with all of that? I don't believe it."
A few minutes earlier the flight
attendant had asked what I wanted to drink, so I said
that I would like hot chocolate with cream and nuts
scattered across the top. She smiled and said, "Actually,
we do have hot chocolate," and she even brought me an
extra container of hot water. I wasn't too excited about
the extra water because I suffer from "spill-drinkinson's
disease."
As I moved the trash on my tray table
away from me, the water container fell towards us and
spilled hot water on both Earl and myself. So I said,
"Well, now we are both in hot water. Never mind though.
Let's not believe it happened."
Meanwhile, I could hear Helen laughing
as she read the book. He asked me if my wife or I wrote
it. When I said that I was the author, he mumbled something
about me being a traitor.
From then on he was extra friendly
and kept asking me questions about the things of God.
I took him more thoroughly through the Commandments,
the cross, and thanked him for being so gracious and
listening. He said, "You're welcome. Not many people
talked to me about this." He was grateful that I had
spoken to him, and I was so thankful that I didn't listen
to my fears.
When Kirk and I produced a program
on how to witness to homosexuals, we came up short on
interviews, so we decided to visit the homosexual district
of West Hollywood. The day we were due to go there,
I was a little nervous. As I was driving there with
the camera crew, someone asked if I was nervous. I said,
"I share my courage with others and keep my fear to
myself." That was a great truth I learned from Robert
Louis Stephenson. Just after that, Kirk called and said,
"I'm nervous." I said, "So am I."
When we arrived, it wasn't what I
expected. The gay district had a festive atmosphere,
with men walking hand in hand and greeting one another
with long hugs, and women passionately kissing each
other. The area was upper class, safe, clean and tidy.
It was a "sanitized Sodom."
I saw two men sitting together, so
I walked up to them and said, "Hi. We're doing a TV
program on America's spirituality and we want to get
the perspective from the gay community. Are you two
gay?" Their names were Kevin and Ryan. Kevin was homosexual
and Ryan was bisexual. Ryan didn't want to be on TV,
so I called the crew over and Kirk interviewed Kevin.
I went over to Ryan, sat next to him
and asked if he had had a Christian background. His
mother was Christian and his father was Catholic. He
said that he had been pleading with God in prayer to
take away his homosexual tendencies. I said, "You know
what helped me? It was the Ten Commandments," and I
took him through the Law, and into the cross. I told
him that he needed a new nature, prayed with him and
then left him with some literature to help him. He was
so grateful, and I was so thankful that I didn't listen
to my fears.
Have you ever noticed that when you
turn on a light, darkness leaves? The two are incompatible.
It's the same with fear and love. Love casts out fear.
When we turn on the light of God's love, fear can't
stay. It has to leave. The key is to let love cause
you to think of the terrifying fate of the person to
whom you want to witness.
Paralyzing and tormenting fear isn't
from God, but it can work for your evangelistic good.
It can make you trust in God. Fear shows us that we
are weak, and it causes me to call on God for His help.
So don't let your fears discourage you. Instead, let
them drive you to Him that gives courage, and in so
doing, your greatest weakness then becomes your greatest
strength.
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