Maxie Dunnam tells of an...
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Maxie Dunnam tells of an incident that happened at Christ United Methodist Church in Memphis, Tennessee, just after he became the senior pastor there. A sixteen-year-old girl was abducted by a man and held captive in an upper crawl space of the church for four months. She had been given up for dead by most people, including the police.
However, the custodian noticed that food kept disappearing from the refrigerator in the church kitchen. He and another man were able to set a trap for the abductor and captured him. Of course, they also found the girl and set her free. Upon hearing the good news, the girl's father came to the church, embraced the two men who had saved his daughter, and expressed his gratitude with words and tears of joy.
A short time later, Dr. Dunnam visited the girl and her family. The father again expressed his joy in words and tears as he said, "It's Easter for us. Our daughter is alive. You can't imagine our joy."
The pastor indicated that it was a kind of Easter for everyone in that congregation as well as for many persons in Memphis. The incident served as a reminder that love will win over hatred in our world.
Such was the message of the first Easter. Life had triumphed over death as Christ returned and revealed himself to his followers - the apostles - and to Paul.
However, the custodian noticed that food kept disappearing from the refrigerator in the church kitchen. He and another man were able to set a trap for the abductor and captured him. Of course, they also found the girl and set her free. Upon hearing the good news, the girl's father came to the church, embraced the two men who had saved his daughter, and expressed his gratitude with words and tears of joy.
A short time later, Dr. Dunnam visited the girl and her family. The father again expressed his joy in words and tears as he said, "It's Easter for us. Our daughter is alive. You can't imagine our joy."
The pastor indicated that it was a kind of Easter for everyone in that congregation as well as for many persons in Memphis. The incident served as a reminder that love will win over hatred in our world.
Such was the message of the first Easter. Life had triumphed over death as Christ returned and revealed himself to his followers - the apostles - and to Paul.
