Joni Eareckson Tada JONI AND FRIENDS MINISTRIES
Transcription
Joni Eareckson Tada JONI AND FRIENDS MINISTRIES
JONI AND FRIENDS MINISTRIES WHEELS FOR THE WORLD Wheels for the World exists to serve the 20 million people around the world who need a wheelchair. Throughout the U.S., volunteers collect used but serviceable wheelchairs. Donated chairs are then restored to like-new condition by inmates in select U.S. correctional facilities. The wheelchairs are then shipped to developing nations where our Wheels for the World teams fit each wheelchair to its recipient. People with disabilities also receive a Bible in their language and the Gospel message of Jesus Christ. Over 100,000 wheelchairs have been distributed. Learn more on our website’s Wheels for the World page. FAMILY RETREATS All families experience stress, but when a household member has a disability, the stress and strain can be overwhelming. It’s why our five-day Family Retreats provide recreation, refreshment, fellowship, support, and camp-style fun for the whole family — parents and children affected by a variety of disabilities. Our staff and volunteers serve as Short-Term Missionaries (STMs) at Family Retreats held across the US and at International Family Retreats held overseas in developing nations. Come serve and volunteer at a Family Retreat! RADIO For over three decades, Joni has broadcasted a message of inspiration and hope through her award-winning, 4-minute radio programs and 60-second features. Her voice is heard across the U.S. and overseas, reaching an estimated listening audience of over one million people through broadcast and online radio. With topics including disability, marriage, and a biblical look at suffering, Joni’s radio programs have a message for everyone, so listen in on our website radio page. CHRISTIAN INSTITUTE ON DISABILITY Human life can now be altered, redefined, aborted, cloned, and euthanized. Our Christian Institute on Disability (CID) promotes a biblical view of life, human dignity, and the value of all individuals — disabled or not. Through our innovative Beyond Suffering curriculum and partnerships with universities and seminaries, we train and equip leaders and students to evangelize, include, and empower people affected by disability. Visit our website to learn more about our online Beyond Suffering course of study. “Go out quickly into the streets and alleys of the town and bring in the poor, the crippled, the blind, and the lame... so that my house will be full.” – Luke 14:21-23 CONTACT US Are you interested in learning more about disability ministry? Would you like to volunteer with a ministry outreach, or help your church develop a Sunday school program for children with special needs? Perhaps you have a disability, or know someone who does – if so, contact us at Joni and Friends where our team of disability experts can provide you with practical, biblical resources that will meet your needs and equip you to do God’s work. CAUSE 4 LIFE GLOBAL MISSIONS & INTERNSHIPS Cause 4 Life interns are introduced to a biblical view of disability through our Beyond Suffering curriculum. They are then given opportunities to apply these biblical principles, coupled with their unique individual skills, in hands-on local ministries and global international missions. Each intern is mentored and challenged to implement disability ministry as part of his or her life calling. If you know of a student or college graduate who would enjoy interning with us, ask them to visit our Cause 4 Life page on our website. PO Box 3333, Agoura Hills, CA 91301 Phone: (818) 707-5664 • Fax: (818) 707-2391 www.joniandfriends.org Joni and Friends is an international Christian ministry that brings the Good News of Jesus to the world’s one billion people affected by disability. With its life-changing programs, Joni and Friends serves the world’s neediest; that is, people with disabilities in the U.S. and around the world. © 2016 Joni and Friends. All rights reserved. Scripture quotations taken from the Holy Bible: New International Version ®. J oni Eareckson Tada Her Story JONI’S STORY F or years, I was one of those who insisted, “Disability happens to other people, not me.” My family was the athletic type, always up for a game of tennis, camping, or backpacking. My three older sisters and I never so much as sprained an ankle. All that changed on a hot July afternoon in 1967 when my sister Kathy and I went to a beach on the Chesapeake Bay for a quick swim. The water was murky in the afternoon sun and I didn’t bother to check the depth when I hoisted myself onto a raft anchored offshore. I positioned my feet on the edge, took a deep breath, and plunged into the water. Sprong! My head hit something hard, snapped back, and I felt a strange electric shock in the back of my neck. Floating facedown and dazed, I realized I was unable to surface to the top. Why won’t my arms move? Why can’t my feet kick?! My lungs were screaming for air, but just as I opened my mouth to “breathe” water, I felt my sister’s arms around me, lifting me to fresh air. “Kathy,” I sputtered when I saw my lifeless arms slung over her shoulder, “I can’t feel!” A sunbather rushed into the water to bring his raft. Someone called an ambulance. Within an hour, nurses in the hospital emergency room were cutting off my wet bathing suit, rings, and necklace. My head was spinning and I began to lose consciousness when I heard a buzzing drill near my head — a doctor was drilling bolts into my skull to stabilize my neck! My diving accident catapulted me into the strange, frightening world of tubes and machines. Doctors put me on a Stryker frame, a long canvas “sandwich” on which I laid face up for several hours, and then was flipped facedown to prevent pressure sores. It didn’t help. Within months, I lost so much weight that my bones began to stick through my hips and elbows. That meant more operations and more months on the Stryker frame. Deep, dark depression set in. “How could you have allowed this to happen to me, God,” I asked. “I was a Christian before my accident … what did I do wrong? Am I being punished?!” Resentment against God began to fester in my heart. Friends prayed for me around the clock. After almost a year in the hospital, I began to sense a difference. I was no longer asking “why” with a clenched, angry fist; instead, I began asking “why” with a searching heart. Little did I realize it, but God was beginning to soften my bruised and hurting soul through the power of prayer. I really noticed the change in occupational therapy. Weeks earlier, I had stubbornly refused to learn to write with a pencil clenched between my teeth. Then I met Tom, a young ventilator-dependent quadriplegic who was more paralyzed than I was. His attitude was enthusiastic as he permitted the therapist to put the pencil in his mouth. It made me ashamed of my grumbling and complaining. God used the prayers of my friends and the example of Tom to show me the truth of Romans 8:28, “In all things God works for the good of those who love him.” God’s idea of good was not necessarily to give me back use of my hands or legs. Instead, God gave me patience, perseverance, a more flexible attitude, an appreciation for the small things in life, deeper friendships, and an ability to smile — not in spite of my circumstances but because of them. GOD WORKS FOR THE GOOD OF THOSE WHO LOVE HIM Now, many decades later, my husband Ken and I share God’s message of hope with hurting people around the world. And whenever I’m tempted to feel discouraged, I remember that God knows exactly how I feel. He once suffered too. And because Jesus turned His cross into a symbol of hope and freedom, I can do the same — for my wheelchair is the prison God used to set my spirit free! WHAT MAKES THIS STORY SPECIAL… D o you want to experience the same freedom that Joni found? Do you feel confined by difficult problems and are looking for hope and joy? Don’t go your own way, resisting God (in other words, sinning). You may think, “But I don’t sin.” God’s Word says, “All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God” (Romans 3:23). Our pride and selfishness cause us to miss the mark of true righteousness, but “God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life” (John 3:16). Jesus died on the cross as your substitute — He bore God’s displeasure with your sin, so that you might find forgiveness and a home in heaven. It’s why Jesus is known as our Savior. However, you must receive such a precious gift. Romans 10:9 says, “That if you confess with your mouth, ‘Jesus is Lord,’ and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.” So agree with God that you have sinned. Then promise to turn from your selfish way of living, and turn to Jesus Christ, God’s Son. Believe that He died on the cross as your substitute, and that His resurrection purchased a place for you in eternity with Him. Finally, place your trust and confidence in Jesus as your Savior, and follow Him as your Lord. God is more concerned about what’s in your heart than what you recite in a particular prayer, but if you need help calling on Him as your Savior, borrow the following words… Lord Jesus, thank you for paying the debt for my sin by dying on the cross. I confess my sins, which are many. Thank you for forgiving me and I want to show you my gratitude by turning away from my old sinful habits. I embrace you as the Lord of my life and I desire to follow you the rest of my days. Thank you for giving me power and strength to live a life that honors and pleases you! I pray this in the only name that saves, Jesus Christ. Amen.
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