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9_11_-_Bob_Long_-_face_of_evilPhoto Courtesy Of Ben Sutherland Via Flickr.com

By Cindy Mallette | ResonateNews.com

AUSTIN, Texas — Bob Long’s granddaughter is 15 years old this year. The preacher and leader of Rally Call Ministries here is concerned that the young woman — who was just 5 years old when the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks occurred — will not be raised to fully appreciate the change that took place in America physically and spiritually on that day a decade ago.

“Culturally one of our greatest strengths is moving forward, being irrepressible, unbeatable. But in that, we don't teach our generations to remember. We don't intentionally build a sense of nationhood into our young people. I have a real concern for the next generation because, for them, it's just a history thing. They need to be more aware of what happened that day,” Long said. “We need to look at the videos from that day. We need to do it more often. Not so it will result in making us angry, but so it would push us toward understanding the spiritual reality of events like that. There is a spiritual significance.”

America has a tendency to pack away painful moments in time until the rawness has passed. Long said that is a weakness — one that causes Americans to avoid confronting and dealing with the truth of good and evil in the world. Add a comment

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Doug_StringerDoug Stringer, founder and president of Somebody Cares America, said he would not be involved with The Response if it were a partisan affair. The Aug. 6 day of prayer is intended to be a sincere gathering of people focused on honoring God, he said.
                                 Courtesy Photo/
                 Somebody Cares America

By Raymond Billy
| ResonateNews.com

What started as the efforts of a man frustrated with “nominal” Christianity has blossomed into an interracial, interdenominational, interstate and international movement to empower benevolence ministries. Now Doug Stringer, founder and president of Somebody Cares America, is using his mediatory abilities to get Christians to heed The Response, the Aug. 6 day of prayer initiated by Texas Gov. Rick Perry.

The event will be held from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Houston's Reliant Stadium and simulcast at many churches throughout Texas and the United States.


Stringer, 55, is part of The Response's 13-person leadership team. His role is to marshal churches and ministries across the country to take part in the event. The Houston resident said early reservations he had about participating in the event have been allayed.


"When I was approached about the possibility of joining the leadership of this gathering, I needed to know 'Is it going to be an authentic day of prayer and fasting, or is it going to be political?'” Stringer told ResonateNews.com on Monday. Stringer said he was first contacted about The Response by Luis and Jill Cataldo of the International House of Prayer in Kansas City. “After speaking with event organizers, I became confident that on Aug. 6, we will join together in Houston in a posture of sincere prayer and humility before the Lord.”

Stringer said he respects that Perry wants the American church to seek Christ to help the country overcome myriad challenges.


Governor Perry has acknowledged that there are some things beyond government's ability to remedy. We've been faced with natural disasters, societal unrest and economic collapse all at once. We are in great need of direction from God at this time in our country's history.”

Media hype,” Stringer said, has had the effect of delegitimizing The Response in the minds of many Christians — some of whom continue to harbor the same concerns he once had. Those concerns — coupled with legal challenges from church-state separationist groups — have brought undue negative attention to the prayer initiative, he said. Whatever concerns people might have about Perry's involvement or potential political undertones, Stringer said the catalyst of The Response should not cause Christians to overlook its ostensive purpose.

There's a lot of suffering in the country right now. So, we can argue until we're blue in the face over whether this is the proper thing to do, or we can pray,” Stringer said. “I believe that ultimately, the Christian opponents and the atheists will benefit from what happens in our country as a result of our prayers,” he said, noting that a positive outcome would benefit the entire nation and all of its citizens.

Stringer said he would not be a part of The Response if it were a partisan affair. He has spent most of his life at the center of conciliatory enterprises through Somebody Cares America and its international arm. The organization is an affiliate of Turning Point Ministries International, which started modestly in a Houston fitness center in the early 1980s. Stringer said his ministry career was born out of a prayer of repentance.


I was a so-called Christian living a compromised life and I decided almost 30 years ago that I wanted to bring a smile to God's face for a change,” Stringer recalled. “I asked God to use me anyway he saw fit. He worked on my heart and I began to notice the disaffected members of society — the addicts, the homeless, the prostitutes — and started ministering to them,” he said.

Stringer took to the streets along with other evangelism-minded Christians and began sharing the Gospel with people on the fringes of Houston society. The group soon began housing homeless people in their own apartments and linking them with other residents or ministries willing to take them in. By 1983, Stringer's fitness studio had become Turning Point Studio — a Christian Activities and Fellowship Center.


By the early 1990s, Somebody Cares was formed as the outreach arm of Turning Point. Its mission is to use its human and financial resources to help existing humanitarian organizations meet the needs of the communities they serve. Somebody Cares has played a role in the recovery efforts in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, in Haiti after last year's earthquake and in Japan in the wake of numerous natural disasters there this year, among many other projects.


A central component of the organization's work is fostering cooperation among disparate factions in pursuit of mutually shared goals — namely spreading the love of Christ through humanitarianism and verbalizing the Gospel. Stringer said he's certain The Response won't compromise his role as a unifier.


I have a diverse network of friends and associates within the Christian community. I want to be a bridge-builder,” Stringer said. “I wouldn't want to be involved in something that could reasonably be construed as divisive.”

Stringer said the Aug. 6 prayer gathering is intended to be anything but polarizing.


I know some of my friends have a problem with this because of Gov. Perry's involvement. But, it doesn't matter who called for it. He's saying we need prayer.”

Prayer preaching” — statements intended to usher listeners toward the speaker's opinions, rather than into the presence of God — will not be allowed, Stringer said. He said he is among the leaders with authority to disrupt such incidents. But, he said, even if some untoward behavior takes place during The Response, it would not discredit the entire event.

If I can see 75 percent of the day be an authentic and pure outpouring of repentance and worship, I think God will be pleased,” he said.

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Uganda_worshipersSingers and orphans celebrate at the Parental Care Ministries school in Mbarara, Uganda, on Sunday. Nearly 400 people attended the four-hour service full of music, singing and celebration.
                                    Photo By Patrick Butler/Resonate News

“There was never a Sunday Service like this,” was the sentiment echoed by Parental Care Ministries team members after four hours of celebration, praise and testimony at an outdoor gathering place.

The sticks-and-bedsheets shelter was put together all day Saturday by church members. The construction was reminiscent of the “brush arbor” shelters of Texas history when available materials were used to facilitate shade for spiritual seekers. But the colors included with streamers from the sheet-lined roof — the blue, pink and yellow sheets — flapping in the breeze in the background gave a satisfying and nearly surreal sensation of opulence found in more well-to-do churches.

In fact, there was no sense of deprivation, no sorrow for the lack of stained-glass structures with big-screen stimulation. The church — the Christians at the Parental Care Ministries School in Mbarara, Uganda — provided all the stimulation a body could want with what they had — open and unabashed hearts to God in all they spoke, sang and said.

There was never a Sunday Service like this. Choir after choir made up of students, adults, mixed or gender selective made their presentations, and the sound was beautiful. Time flew by as joy, worship, praise and messages rebounded off the sheets and into the hearts of the team members. Add a comment

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LONDON — Rural Uganda is a culture shock, especially if one is staying where I've stopped over on my way back to the United States — near famous Piccadilly Circus in London, close to Buckingham Palace and Parliament buildings, the center of a former world empire.

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My expedition to Africa was met with smashing success and a revelation; not only can simple, rural Africans teach "wealthy" Americans something about relationship with God, it is essential Americans understand what Africans have learned if they are to survive spiritually.

Read more regarding these thoughts in my "Under The Waterfall" column this Saturday. Thank you for following me to Africa.


Patrick Butler is the executive editor of Resonate News. He has been visiting Uganda with Parental Care Ministries, an organization dedicated to helping the country's orphans.

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RWIMIKOMA, Uganda — American children are “ruined” compared to orphans in Uganda, Africa who lack some of the most basic physical comforts abundant in the West, such as clean drinking water. That was the assessment of Tyler, Texas business man Rocky Gill as he toured a remote hillside orphanage here recently.

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Asked what Africans can teach Americans, Gill said, “What can’t they teach us?” as he surveyed about 100 children at the Parental Care Ministries school here. “When I see these children worshipping God the way they do,” Gill said, “the genuine and powerful prayers they make, the love and gratitude they show to us and the open hearts they have, it makes me think ‘we have ruined our children in America.’”

After witnessing the interactions of school staff and students faced with a life of what Americans would consider downright deprivation, it would be hard not agree with Gill.

Traveling two hours up bumpy dirt roads in lush, eclectic green countryside wet with morning rains, we finally reached Rwimikoma (pronounced “Rim-a-coma”) and were greeted by two lines of singing schoolchildren serenading the Team Ten members walking up the hill between them.

The children broke ranks, hugging us until all were touched by hands, hugs and smiles. Then the fun began.

Patrick Butler is the editor of Resonate News. He is visiting Uganda with Parental Care Ministries, an organization dedicated to helping the country's orphans.

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MBARARA, Uganda — “Unfiltered love” is what happened when the Parental Care team of nine finally encountered the enthusiasm of a Southwest-Ugandan church congregation on Monday. Nothing in our 10,000-mile, 20-hour trip prepared me for that reception of unfiltered love, a phrase coined by team member Rocky Gill, 40-ish and a fellow Ugandan newbie.

“It’s almost overwhelming,” Gill said to me after being mobbed by children and adults alike by the church in Kafuzi — at another place simply called the “Chicken Church” — and the Parental Care School by human beings who seemed overjoyed we were there. The people were literally the living stones of God’s spirit embracing us unreservedly, fully and as if they had known us as favored family for most of their lives. Add a comment

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EN ROUTE TO ENTEBBE, Uganda — Riding the heavenly contrails at 35,000 feet here from London, Heathrow Airport with Parental Care Ministries was a trip in itself. The Boeing 767 aircraft was full of missionaries. In my row alone, three “sent ones” from three different ministries flanked me on the right and left, so between us there was the confluence of four outreaches to Uganda.

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This makes one wonder, “What is God up to in Uganda?”

On my right was 31-year-old Amanda from the Alabama church of David Platt — the author of “Radical: Taking Your Faith Back From The American Dream.”  I showed her where just one night earlier, while flying to London, I had written a comment in his book about what the 32-year-old pastor of The Church at Brook Hill said.   

Platt wrote that Jesus called his disciples "to abandon their careers. They were reorienting their entire life’s work around discipleship to Jesus. Their plans and dreams were now being swallowed up in his.

My margin comment was, “Is the author doing this? Or does it just make good copy?”

“Oh, David is doing it, I assure you,” said Amanda, who has attended Platt’s church for three years. “It’s not easy, and we’re not perfect, but I can tell you this is foremost on our minds."
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