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11th
June, 2006
DAVID
ADAMS
There are times when Doug Stringer - US-based evangelist,
author, preacher and founder of Christian outreach organisation
Somebody Cares - says he can relate to Forrest Gump, the unlikely
hero of the 1994 film of the same name.
“He’d always end up in these photographs with
all these famous people...he just showed up in the picture,”
he explains.
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THROWN
IN THE DEEP END: Doug Stringer, the founder of US-based
ministries Turning Point International and Somebody
Cares, started seeing God use him to touch people's
lives from the day he decided to "sell out for
the Lord".
"I’m
like Forrest Gump, I just show up in the picture and
I make myself available and God seems to use that,”
says Doug Stringer.
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“I
realise, with me, from one moment I can be in a garbage dump
in Surabaya with thousands of homeless people and an hour
or so later I can be in the presidential palace praying with
the president. I’ve been with some of the most famous
and wealthiest people from different arenas - from sports
through to politics - and I think to myself 'What am I doing
here? I don’t have a clue what I’m doing’.
But I’m like Forrest Gump, I just show up in the picture
and I make myself available and God seems to use that.”
The 49-year-old - who recently made the latest of his many
trips to Australia where he spoke to churches and pastors
in Victoria - has spent the past 25 years working among and
for those who society shuns, sowing God’s word and life
into their lives, initially in Houston, Texas, and, more recently,
all around the globe.
Born in Japan to a Japanese mother and an American navy frogman
who was in Japan during the Korean War, Stringer went to the
US at an early age where he lived in most of his younger years
in the west coast city of San Diego.
After his parents divorced and his mother remarried, at the
age of 15 he went back to live in Japan when his stepfather,
also in the US navy, was stationed there. There he took up
baseball, playing for the US, and wrestling, becoming first
in his weight class for Japan.
Stringer returned to the US at the age of 18. After dropping
out of school, he spent some time living rough, riding goods
trains up and down the west coast of the country before, at
the age of 21, he tracked down and met up with his biological
father in Houston, Texas.
“Though it was great to see my father, there was something
missing - I knew that wasn’t all I was looking for,”
he says. “And in was in that next three year journey
- from ‘78 to ‘81 - that the Lord had to take
me through a whole chain of events before finally bringing
me to Himself.”
Stringer was running his own fitness centre in Houston when
he finally "began a relationship" with Christ. Amazingly,
he recalls that he started ministering to people virtually
from the day he decided to “sell out for the Lord”.
“The Lord began to set things in order immediately in
me. Everytime I read the Scriptures at night it became alive
to me. The very next day I’d share it with people at
my exercise studio and people I’d come across and that
one verse I’d read the night before became life to someone
else," he recalls.
“I began to move in words of knowledge for people, I
began to pray for people and they’d just look at me
with tears in their eyes. I didn’t know what an evangelist
was at the time but people would come to Christ everyday.
After I would close my business at 9 o’clock at night,
people would start showing up - 20, 30, 50, 150, 200, 250
- on any given night we would have functions; (my exercise
centre) became a Christian activities centre. And this was
me as a brand new Christian just making myself available.
The Lord used that - in fact that was one of my prayers -
'Lord, if you can use anyone like me, who's broken your heart
and brought shame to your name, I make myself available to
you'. And that’s what He did, He took me at my word.”
“Soon
I began to see hitch-hikers and runaways and drug addicts
and prostitutes and people who were in desperate need. I tried
to call places but I couldn’t find anywhere or they
had waiting lists, so I just put them in my apartment. One
day I had 17 people from the streets, just before Christmas
one year, living in my apartment. A businessman gave me a
two bedroom apartment if I would teach a Bible study and an
exercise class once a week in the new apartment complex he
developed...well, I put six more people there. Then another
group of Christian businessmen had a three-bedroom house that
they didn’t know what to do with so they gave it to
me and I put 12 more people there. So that’s the humble
beginnings - I was thrown into ministry, literally.”
It wasn’t until several years later in the mid-Eighties
that Stringer says he even recognised that he was a minister.
"I
started giving them a business card that said - ‘Somebody
Cares. Call 24 Hours a Day’ and gave them a
hotline pager number and a phone number. I found there
were kids that for some reason, because of that term,
would not throw those cards away; they’d hang
on to them just as a last semblance of hope."
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“I
thought that’s what all Christians were supposed to
do - to make themselves available,” he says. “(The
recognition came) only after a group of pastors and other
ministers said ‘Doug don’t you realise God has
ordained you? You can’t run from something God has placed
in you’.”
The origin of the outreach ministry, Somebody Cares, dates
back to that time.
“Working with runaways and drug addicts and prostitutes
and gang members, I would pass out tracts or Christian literature,
but I noticed that a lot of them would throw those away,”
says Stringer.
“But I started giving them a business card that said
- ‘Somebody Cares. Call 24 Hours a Day’ and gave
them a hotline pager number and a phone number. I found there
were kids that for some reason, because of that term, would
not throw those cards away; they’d hang on to them just
as a last semblance of hope. So anywhere from a few months
to years later, people would call from those business cards.”
He began to notice a group of like-minded people - those who
had a “heart of compassion for the lost” - doing
similar work to himself. So he started a network called Somebody
Cares with the aim of linking together those who were reaching
out to others.
By the early Nineties, the Somebody Cares network had grown
to include 300 pastors and ministers from across denominations
and ethnicities within the Houston area who joined together
in signing a covenant of unity. In 1996 those involved with
Somebody Cares joined together in what become known as 'Houston
Prayer Mountain', praying and fasting together for 40 days
as they lifted up their city and nations over the world to
God. More than 25,000 people showed up.
“We had very notable miracles,” recalls Stringer.
“Gang members would walk in and take off their colors
and give their lives to Christ; we had people from various
denominations who normally wouldn’t even work together
come and leave their labels outside as they came to pray together.”
These
days Somebody Cares continues to bring together Christians
of various backgrounds to pray together for common purposes,
such as 'Adopt-A-Gang' initiatives in which people pray for
the members of particular gangs or prayer walks which focus
on prayer for particular neighbourhoods.
It's also involved in “compassion coalition” initiatives
which bring together Christians, churches and organisations
who are already helping to address the unique humanitarian
or other needs of a community in some way to better coordinate
their efforts.
“Rather than creating something, you identify what already
exists in a community and bring those organisations together
to be more impacting...” explains Stringer. “What
that does, it tends to open the hearts of the unchurched to
see the relevancy of Christ being tangible through the church
- not the institutional church so much as through the church
of a community. It also provokes the church of a community
to realise that ‘You know, we are part of something
bigger than ourselves; that is not just about my stewardship
of one congregation, this is about me co-pastoring or co-facilitating
the church of a greater region’.”
While Somebody Cares started out as the Houston-based outreach
arm of Stringer's other ministry, Turning Point International
(an organisation which now has missionaries on almost every
continent), the model on which it's based began to catch the
attention of others.
“We
found that there were...cities around the country and around
the world who said 'We want to do the same thing'," says
Stringer.
As a result, the
Somebody Cares 'model' has since been exported to a number
of other cities and regions around the US - including in Texas,
Florida, California and Massachusetts - as well as to cities
and even whole nations overseas, such as in Fiji and the Scottish
city of Aberdeen.
"The
Somebody Cares 'model' has since been exported to
a number of other cities and regions around the US
- including in Texas, Florida, California and Massachusetts
- as well as to cities and even whole nations overseas,
such as in Fiji and the Scottish city of Aberdeen."
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Such has been the success of the model that on several occasions
when a natural disaster has hit a region - such as when Hurricane
Ivan stormed across the south-eastern United States in 2004
or when the worst floods in 70 years recently affected parts
of New England in the country’s north - authorities
turned to the local Somebody Cares networks for help.
“So what’s happening is in all these communities
(is that)...when something happens, they immediately go to
and call or email Somebody Cares to see how they can help
or get help,” explains Stringer. “It’s become
a localised network of churches and ministries who are becoming
very tangible expressions of Christ’s love for the community.”
In part two, Doug Stringer talks about Somebody Cares'
role in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, revivals taking
place around the world and his 'Australian connection'. Click
here to go there...
~ www.dougstringer.com
Somebody Cares America
~ www.somebodycares.org
Turning Point Ministries International
~ tpmi.blogspot.com
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