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An
Obvious Miracle
I was pretty exhausted after a full
weekend of ministry. Kirk, myself and Duane Barnhart,
our producer had flown from LA to Chicago, to Springfield,
and then driven to Branson in Missouri for a conference.
After the conference we had had the great joy of preaching
the gospel (open air style) inside a mall to hundreds
of people.
Afterwards, I interviewed a man who
was holding a large white duck. As the interview unfolded
I found that he was a comedian in Branson. He said,
"How would you like to shake hands with a duck?"
I immediately reached out and shook hands with the bird.
Then he said, "Have you ever shaken hands with
a duck before?" I said that I hadn't, to which
he replied, "You still haven't. That was his foot."
I was then driven back to Springfield,
where I flew to Dallas, then to Houston and then Memphis,
and then back to Los Angeles. It was late on Sunday
night, I was tired but I couldn't get to sleep because
I was in the insomniac row. The very back row in a plane
is the row in which the seats don't go back. Besides,
the lady next to me had a toddler on her lap and the
little cutie tended to scream if I wasn't pulling faces,
doing "the light show," or making weird noises.
After three hours of face-pulling
and intermittent writing, I decided to get up and give
the flight attendant a copy of What Hollywood Believes.
She was excited and showed the book to a man who was
sitting across the aisle from me. That gave me an opportunity
to try and witness to him. As he was fingering through
the publication, I passed him a copy of the CD of the
same name. He asked what the book and CD were about,
so I told him that it was about Hollywood celebrities
and what they believed about the afterlife. I then asked
him what he thought happens. He didn't answer with
much conviction, and as we were talking across the aisle,
the sound of the engines tended to kill any meaningful
conversation. I decided to change gears a little.
I told him that I co-hosted a TV program
with Kirk Cameron--where we go to the streets and ask
people questions like that. Then I asked what he did
for a living. He said that he was a movie and television
producer, so I asked him if he would like me to mail
him his own copy of the book. He said that he would,
and handed me his business card.
The next day I typed his name and address
onto a label. His name was Jim, so I thought that I
would sign the book to personalize it. It would say
"To Jim, with best wishes. Yours, Ray." Then
I would put my personal email address under that (something
I rarely give out), in case he wanted to talk further
about the possibility of doing a television program
based on the book, something I had been praying about.
I walked into our store, grabbed a
hard cover copy of the book off a pile. I then walked
back to my office, sat down, opened it at the title
page. I was about to write "To Jim, with best wishes.
Yours, Ray" and then put my email address, when
I saw something I could hardly believe. There, written
in my own hand-writing were the words "To Jim,
with best wishes. Yours, Ray." Underneath it was
my personal email address. It was exactly what I was
about to write. It was very strange.
A moment later I realized what had
happened. Two weeks earlier I had sent three signed
copies to Jim Carrey to three different addresses, hoping
that at least one would get to him. This particular
book had been returned by UPS, and had been mistakenly
put back into the store. That was the copy I had picked
up.
I thought that perhaps this was God's
way of letting me know that He was leading me. It was
encouraging, but before I entered into anything with
Hollywood, I wanted to know that I really did have God's
leading. So I sent the book though the post office.
If he actually received it, it would be an obvious miracle.
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