CWNews.com
-MANCHESTER, Ky.-
Last fall, we brought you the amazing story of a Kentucky drug town
that was transformed by the power of God. Little did anybody know
the huge impact this story would have on cities and towns all over
the world.
It
was the march seen around the world. In May, 2004, nearly 4,000
people came out to march against drugs in the small town of Manchester,
Kentucky.
The
pastors repented before God and their communities for allowing the
darkness to settle in. The drug dealers were put on notice: "get
saved or get busted."
They'd
had enough. Over the next 12 months, they saw dramatic changes in
their town -- drug arrests went way up, drug dealers and users started
coming to church and getting free from their addictions, and the
story of Manchester was seen around the world on the 700 Club.
Pastor
Doug Abner of Community Church said, "About two hours after
the story of Manchester aired the first time live, we started getting
telephone calls."
Pastor
Abner keeps track of all the states that have contacted him - 33
so far - and hundreds of towns. "Not only did we hear
from people in the U.S., but we got e-mails from New Zealand, France,
Wales, England, and British Columbia; just mind-boggling,"
said Abner.
Nearly
every request was the same: "Help us do in our town what you
did in Manchester."
Pastor
Mike England of Tri-State Christian Center in Blue Ridge, Georgia,
said, "We were blown away, because we knew we had a serious,
serious methamphetamine problem. We have other drugs too, but meth
is just overwhelming. We had no idea how to battle it - or deal
with it. We saw that video and we got hope that somebody might have
an answer about how to attack it!"
Pastor
England showed the 700 Club story to his church.
"I
didn't even preach because the floor of the church was just littered
with people weeping and weeping after seeing that video, and I wasn't
going to touch that because that's a holy thing." After that
- my wife decided we needed to come here and see for ourselves,"
England explained.
And
that's just what they did. After a surprise visit to Manchester,
Pastor England and his wife just showed up on Pastor Abner's doorstep.
Then
the Englands headed back to Georgia, where they helped organize
the first-ever march against meth. In August, some 3,000 residents
of Fannin County, Georgia took to the streets.
The local news covered the event.
In
Longview, Texas - a similar story of desperation. Shannon Smallwood's
family was almost ready to give up, after struggling for years with
a family member hooked on crack cocaine
.
Smallwood said, "I just flipped on the TV and the 700 Club
was on, and I saw this community marching, concerning drug abuse
in their city. And what God did in that city was just amazing and
miraculous, and pretty much I said, 'God, would You do that in our
city?'
Shannon's
prayer was answered. In May, hundreds of residents in Longview,
Texas donned red-T-shirts in what they called "The Big March."
Their
theme: "The Battle is the Lord's - taken from 2nd Chronicles,
Chapter 20.
Participant
Roger Carr said, "Do not be afraid or discouraged, for the
battle is not yours, but God's - tomorrow, march down against them."
And
in Oceana, West Virginia, sometimes referred to as "Oxy-ana"
because of the drug problem associated with the pain killer Oxycontin,
two marches were held after hearing about what God did in Manchester.
"We
had over 550 people march and it was awesome," said Debbie
Davis. "The Word tells me that God is no respecter of persons
-- if He can do that in Manchester, Kentucky, than He can do that
in Oceana, West Virginia."
Nobody
could have imagined that so many towns, so many lives, would be
inspired - even changed by a single story. And, that a town -- once
hopeless when it came to its drug problem --could give hope to so
many who need it.
"What
I saw on TV that day gave me hope," Texas march organizer Smallwood
said.
Amanda
Tornberg, a former drug user, said, "I believed that I would
never be anything more than the hopeless junkie that I had been
for so long, but God spoke to me and He said, 'You know what, when
you were still in your sins, Christ died for you.'"
"You cannot underestimate the value
of hope in the community," said England. "Churches are
letting down the walls and seriously starting to work together…The
government agencies and the churches are working together for the
first time ever -- that's never happened."
Not
only that, but England says that since the march, calls to the county's
drug-tip hotline are up 10-fold. A good indicator, he says, of things
to come.
And
in Manchester, two 1/2 years after the march -- the area once known
as the pain killer capitol of the nation is now seeing a dramatic
dip in the number of pain killers prescribed by doctors -- and there's
more.
Pastor
Abner said, "We've been told by drug dealers who've now been
set free by Jesus, that if they were still dealing drugs they wouldn't
even stop in our town and buy gas because the climate has changed
so much."
And
Abner says that he's grateful for how God used the 700 Club to share
their story.
"The 700 Club totally changed our lives," Abner said,
"in that, every day, we get to do things in the Kingdom because
people saw that. And every time it's been re-run, we get telephone
calls. We've got a couple of dvd's now; we always send the story
of Manchester out. And we follow that up with calls and we pray
for them and the communities on Sat. morning. I really believe what's
going to happen is that eventually the fire is going to move across
our nation, and we're going to have a tremendous revival in America
again."
England said, "When we saw that video, we saw a community where
the church was actually making an impact. And after visiting here,
I am convinced now - this is reproducible in any community in America.
And this may be the key for the church really impacting America
nation-wide."