Cover
Title
Published in Escondido, California, by Merlin R Carothers Publishing Co.
www.foundationofpraise.com
ISBN 0-943026-35-0
ISBN13 978-0-943026-35-0
eISBN 978-0-943026-47-3
Printed in the United States of America.
Copyright © 2001 by Merlin R. Carothers
Unless otherwise noted, the Bible version used in this publication is The New King James Version Copyright © 1979, 1980, 1982, Thomas Nelson, Inc., Publishers.
Verses marked TLB are taken from The Living Bible, copyright 1971 by Tyndale House Publishers, Wheaton, IL. Used by permission. Scripture quotations noted KJV are from the King James Version of the Bible. Scripture quotations noted Amplified are from THE AMPLIFIED BIBLE: Old Testament. Copyright © 1962, 1964 by Zondervan Publishing House (used by permission); and from THE AMPLI- FIED NEW TESTAMENT. Copyright © 1958 by the Lockman Foundation (used by permission).
Dedication
My special appreciation to my dear wife, Mary, who has edited, advised, and supported me in this book and everything I do. Her skill and spiritual wisdom have caused my work to be far better than I could have done alone.
Also by Merlin Carothers
Prison to Praise
Power in Praise
Answers to Praise
Praise Works!
Walking & Leaping
Bring Heaven into Hell
Victory on Praise Mountain
More Power to You
The Bible on Praise
What’s on Your Mind
Let Me Entertain You
You Can Be Happy Now
Secret Sins
God’s Secret Weapon
Amazing Power of Faith
Contents
1. The Specter of Fear
2. Controlled by Fear - Or by Faith
3. Authority over Fear
4. Faith to Climb Mountains
5. Yes, But What If?
6. Learn and Believe
7. Fear of Death
8. A Man of Great Faith
9. Don’t Be Manipulated
10. Unfair Predicaments
11. What Makes a Church?
12. A Nugget of Pure Gold
13. Steps of Faith
14. Angels Among Us
15. When God Says “Don’t Do It” He Means “Don’t Do It”
16. Power Works
17. Have No Fear, Joy Is Here
18. The Smallest Seed
19. Maturing in Faith
Chapter 1
The Specter of Fear
Fear lurks in the silent darkness, unwanted – hated. It’s power is so great that even when ignored or denied it can still control our destiny.
My first parachute jump was a lesson in sheer terror. The Airborne instructors had vigorously indoctrinated me to believe that I was a tough paratrooper, impervious to fear. Yet I was still afraid.
Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote, “Do the thing you fear and the death of fear is certain.” This adage is often true, but I was afraid during my second jump too. I didn’t know it then, but my hard lessons in living and coping with the more insidious aspects of fear had just begun. I still had much to learn about fear’s enormous capacity to influence our behavior.
We arrived at Fort Benning, Georgia in 1943, two hundred robust, cocky young men from all over the United States. The rigors of infantry basic training were behind us; now we were ready to confront a new challenge – Airborne training.
The grueling physical training we had endured prior to coming to Jump School had, we thought, separated the men from the boys. We were the elite of the Army, we boasted. We could do anything! We eagerly awaited our chance to show the Army what real men were.
Were we afraid? No way! We were embarking on a new and exciting adventure.
The sergeants who greeted us at the bus terminal were seasoned Airborne veterans. They had once been greenhorns like us; they knew our attitudes. The process of ego pulverization was fierce and immediate as they rushed upon us like voracious sharks attacking minnows:
“Pick up those bags, you chicken-livered mama’s boys, and let’s go!”
Mama’s boys? Sergeant, you don’t know who you’re talking to. We aren’t afraid of you or anyone else!
How wrong we were.
The sergeants had one primary objective—to separate the men from the boys. In their less-than-humble opinion, the men were those who would never give up despite of injury, suffering – even torture.
In infantry basic training we had learned to run, or so we thought. But at Airborne School we never just went for a run. All we ever did was run, run, and run some more. Anytime we moved it was on the run. We ran to the latrine. We ran to chow. We ran to training sites – five, ten, or more miles. Finally we reached such a high level of fitness that we could run for hours on end without tiring. Failing meant, heaven forbid, washing out of the glorious Airborne.
But running was fun compared with the rigors at the training sites. At one site we were suspended from harnesses like those that would connect us to a parachute from which we would descend from plane to ground. The harness straps, holding our dead weight and digging into our groins, felt like thin wires straining under two hundred pounds of agonized flesh.
We hung in those harnesses while the sergeants explained, at length, the fine art of being a “famous paratrooper.”
“Do you hurt, mama’s boys? Want to quit?”
“Quit? No way!”
The worst thing that could happen to a sergeant was for one of his mamas’ boys to freeze in the airplane door — refuse to leap into space. His plan was to weed out any trainee who had the potential to quit, and the earlier the better. We trainees were convinced that the sergeants got a bonus for every one of us they could make a washout. None of us wanted to quit, but the sergeants, it seemed, had stronger wills. After the first grueling week our group of 200 had decreased to 150.
Before each disgraced washout departed we were lined up by the truck that would transport him to some unknown, abominable site for a truly awful assignment. The sergeants themselves led us in jeering the miserable failure. This harsh tactic was used to make those of us who remained that much more determined not to be quitters, and never to be afraid.
At the end of the second week 125 of us remained. We ended preliminary training acutely aware that the lowest level to which we could ever sink was to be a washout. So far, so good. We were fearless; we were the aristocracy of the elite. At least that’s what we wanted to believe. On the morning of our first parachute jump, our barracks echoed with jubilant shouts of “Geronimo!”
The worst was yet to come.
We returned to our barracks in triumph that evening, brimming with gusto. We had made it! We had successfully completed our first jump. Only four more jumps and we would earn the coveted silver wings of the full-fledged paratrooper. Nothing could stop us now!
But we noticed that our number had shrunk from 125 to 120. What had happened to the others? We learned that they had been injured. One had broken his leg, but he would recover. Another had broken his back. No one had mentioned that possibility during our training.
The next morning we were a bit less enthusiastic about our upcoming jump. We tried to muster a show of bravado, but none of us could forget the man who had broken his back. A sergeant lined us up for another lecture: “Yesterday one of this group of stupid little boys failed to do what he was taught. He will not jump again. While preparing to land he was so scared that he looked down at the ground rather than straight ahead as you were all taught. He broke his back. If anyone else wants a broken back, do the same thing.”
That evening several more of our comrades failed to return to the barracks. Fear set in. It had become clear to us that our chosen occupation wasn’t all fun and games. Two men went AWOL. They couldn’t face the humiliation of the “quitter’s parade”.
On our fourth jump, three men froze with fear at the open door of the plane, refusing to make the plunge into space. They were treated with the most disdain of all. That evening they were paraded before us and derided as the most contemptible examples of cowards that three mothers ever brought into the world. The rest of us vowed that we would never permit ourselves to be so vilified.
On the morning of our fifth jump there was an oppressive silence in our barracks. If anyone had asked, “Are you afraid?” we would have shot back, “Afraid? No!” And we would have been sincere. Each of us reasoned, “I haven’t quit. Therefore, I’m not afraid.” It was the quitters who had been afraid. However, if an animal with a keen sense of smell had been nearby, it would easily have detected the fear that we so stubbornly denied.
I made it through the five qualifying jumps without a scratch. Had I been afraid? Yes indeed! But I had learned to deny my fear, and finally I stood triumphantly with my comrades as our commanding general pinned the silver wings on my chest. I was now a member of the Army’s most elite society of warriors. There was no reason to be afraid now. That is, not until my next leap into space.
More Lessons to Learn
My lessons in the awesome power of fear had not ended. There was more, much more, to learn. We were told of openings in various specialist schools. Communications School? At nineteen that seemed too dull. Demolitions School? Now that sounded exciting! So this misguided private volunteered for that risky endeavor.
There I encountered an entirely different kind of fear. The training sergeants described in explicit detail what the various explosives could do to the human body. They wanted us to be afraid, but then instructed us to control our fear rather than let it control us. A demolitions expert could not perform the required delicate work if his hands shook with fear. Several men’s hands trembled as they tried to arm bombs set to explode. They were immediately disqualified.
My paratrooper training had convinced me that I was a man of steel. Now I had to prove that I had nerves of steel. I stood alone on a training field holding several pounds of plastic explosives. The sergeant asked me to demonstrate the skills we had learned. If I failed, there would be no graduation ceremony for me!
After Demolitions School, and the disastrous detours described in my first book, Prison to Praise, I was assigned to combat duty as an infantry soldier with the 82nd Airborne Division. My next seven parachute jumps were over Europe, where I had many opportunities to practice denying and controlling my fears. During my time in combat I wished many times that “demolitions expert” was not on my record. At times my hands shook with fear, despite my telling myself that I alone determined if and when the explosives ignited. I learned the extent to which fear can dominate everything we do.
Battle of the Bulge
The sergeant looked at me and repeated his order: “You are to take the point position tonight. Keep your eyes and ears open. Panzers are heading our way.”
My heart sank as I realized that I would be alone in a foxhole. I felt like I was out in front of the entire U.S. Army. Fear began to clutch at me. I knew that if the German tanks attacked that night, there would be nothing between their dreaded panzers and me. I’d be the first Allied soldier they would run into – or over.
It was late December 1944. The Allies were bloodied and reeling from the fierce counteroffensive the Germans had launched through the Ardennes Forest of Belgium. This momentous struggle would be known to history as the Battle of the Bulge.
Outgunned and overwhelmed, my division had been forced several times to pull back. Mere foot soldiers were no match for charging tanks. According to a U.S. Army statistical report released in 1953, 19,246 American men were killed in action, suffered grievous wounds, or died while being held prisoner in that one Ardennes campaign. More than 62,000 men received nonfatal wounds, making this the heaviest single battle toll in U.S. history. British Prime Minister Winston Churchill called it the greatest American battle of the war.
The Germans used their tanks to deadly advantage, and they seemed to have an endless supply of them. Those they sent to destroy us were the biggest and best they had.
As I headed out beyond the front line of U.S. infantry, I had ample reason to be afraid. The knowledge that other Americans would be in foxholes behind me was no comfort. I would have been immensely reassured had I seen a battalion of American tanks racing to my rescue.
I was in A Company, 508th Airborne Infantry Regiment, 82ndAirborne, one of the Army’s most elite divisions. We felt that we were the best of the best. But I wasn’t feeling particularly brave as I continued forward.
I dug in at my designated position, the foxhole my only protection. No sergeant had to order “dig deeper, soldier.” I carried my trusty M1 rifle and a few antitank grenades that I lined up before me. My rifle would shoot straight, but the grenades seldom landed where one aimed them.
As night fell I waited in my foxhole for I knew not what. I was really afraid.
Why did the sergeant choose me for point position? “Point position” is military jargon for sending a soldier out in front of the rest of his unit as it advances through hostile territory. He acts as a scout and “trip wire”. In the event of ambush or land mines, he is the unlucky one. Who wants to be point man? Nobody! Aside from sounding an alarm, what could I be expected to do in a panzer attack? I didn’t feel capable of turning back even one tank, let alone hundreds. I was on guard duty, required to be alert to any signs of attack. I had no illusions about becoming a hero. My primary desire was merely to survive the war in one piece.
As I listened to the wind rustling through the trees, I thought I heard the approach of panzers. I shook my head and tried to think of something else. I tried to enjoy the moonlight glistening off the snow, but that lasted only a short while. Then I imagined that German soldiers were crawling silently toward me. The glistening I saw was probably from piano wire that would be used to strangle me. I shuddered.
The rest of the night was more of the same. My fear of the panzers haunted me, though I tried to keep it at bay. I was practicing the fine art of being afraid.
An old army saying goes: “There are no atheists in foxholes.” That was certainly true for me that night. Except for a brief time in my youth, I hadn’t had much use for God. But in the cold and darkness of my foxhole, I cried out to Him to help me not to be afraid.
Seeing an enemy tank charging right at you is an awesome experience. Talk about fear! That’s the time to be afraid!
But seeing a friendly tank, out in front of you with its guns pointed at the enemy, is an entirely different experience. That tank is working for you – for your good.
When you liken your difficulties to a deadly enemy tank, you will be afraid. That’s when you need a totally new perspective.
God can cause our problems to work for us. If we trust Him, He will turn them around, facing the enemy, and make them work for our good. Once we see that picture clearly and believe that God is working, we will have the joy of seeing Him accomplish many good things in us. As we trust God to work for our good, He will eventually release incredible joy within us.
Finally morning dawned. The dreaded panzers had not come! I had survived being on point. In the haze I saw twelve of our soldiers move off to my right. They were advancing! I was less afraid then and I thought, Great, now there will be someone else between those panzers and me! Then I saw an entire company of American soldiers right behind the first group. As some 150 men moved forward, my mind and muscles relaxed for the first time in many hours.
Then I saw a sight that really warmed my heart. A column of our Sherman tanks was moving toward the front, perhaps a part of General Patton’s “Blood and Guts” Third Army. Patton was a formidable fighter, one of our heroes. If his army was involved, I thought we might get out alive. The clanking and rumbling of those tanks were music to my ears.
The Battle of the Bulge was fought many years ago. When I look back at that dramatic episode in my life, I marvel at how effectively God used it to teach me some very important lessons. While fighting in the Battle of the Bulge, I was also engaged in a personal battle: would I be controlled by fear or by faith? I began to see that both faith and fear are common in life, but that they are powerful enemies and opposing spiritual forces. I discovered that it is a spiritual law that fear breeds lack of confidence which, in turn, produces defeat. Yet it is an equal and opposite spiritual law that faith breeds confidence and – victory!
Fear is like a horde of enemy tanks that threatens us and makes us cower. Faith is like an army of friendly tanks that protects and allows us to advance victoriously. In this light, have you ever felt as if a hostile army was out there waiting for a chance to squash you, to annihilate you? If you have, I know exactly how you feel.
Chaplain Carothers
I returned to the Army as a chaplain in 1953, with good reasons to be no longer afraid. I believed and clung to the promise of 1 John 4:18 that, perfect love casts out fear. But I was still very much afraid to jump out of a perfectly good airplane while far above the earth.
As a chaplain in the Airborne, I made 78 additional jumps. Paratroopers who carefully followed instructions usually broke no bones, although we always hit the ground with a jolt. I went to the hospital many times after jumps, to visit men who had been injured. Only a few of them were seriously hurt, but their injuries grieved me deeply. Such injuries did little to alleviate my battle with fear.
The injuries I sustained didn’t quiet my fears either. Part of me believed that paratroopers were protected by hosts of angels whose primary duty was to ensure that we lived to jump another day. The first inkling that my guardian angel might be off duty was when I made a two-point landing – feet first, then on my head. I managed to roll up my chute, carry it off the field, and sit down under a tree. I sat there for two hours before I realized where I was and that I had made another jump.
On two other occasions I was knocked unconscious upon impact with the ground. Other wayward landings in trees, ditches, water, and on rocks convinced me that parachuting could be exceedingly dangerous.
Night jumps were the worst of all, holding gut-gripping terror for those of us who were halfway sane. We sat nervously in bucket seats until the jumpmaster yelled, “Stand up!” Our static lines were hooked behind us, denying us the security of seeing ourselves attached to something solid. Interior lights were turned off so our eyes could adapt to the outside blackness.
To the right of the exit doors was a red light about the size of a quarter. It looked forebodingly evil, yet every eye was drawn to it. When it went out, a green one flashed on. It meant, “go!” Not “go if you feel like it.” Not “go if you aren’t afraid.” It meant “swallow your terror and leap forth into the dark void.” Will my chute open? Every paratrooper wondered.
Then came the terrifying plunge into black space, the air shrieking past our ears as we descended into the bottomless pit of darkness. For seconds that seemed endless we were gripped in a fist of pure force as the prop-blast flung us like cannonballs into the night. We tumbled swiftly through blackness until finally we reached the end of the unyielding static line attached to the plane. Wham! One instant we were plummeting downward, the next we were reversed upward with an abrupt and violent jerk.
Once the chute opened there was the odd sensation of floating utterly alone in space. We knew we were falling though, and we steeled ourselves to meet Earth’s crushing embrace.
If we could see the ground before landing, we could soften our impact with a sudden strong pull on the four risers, releasing them just before we met the earth. The air, momentarily trapped in the chute, would then soften our landing. With the old World War II-chutes, however, the sensation was more like jumping from a car at thirty miles an hour. Actually, the approaching earth was not the greatest fear; it gives a little. It was the rocks, trees, or buildings that could break our bones – or worse.
Why would any sane person face such dangers if it were not absolutely necessary? Men seem to have a desire to prove their bravery, and I was no exception. I continued to jump, despite the ever-present fear during my ninety leaps into infinity. I am grateful for the valuable lessons on how to cope – and how not to cope – with fear.
As a paratrooper I learned to deal with fear by denying it, hoping it would go away. I tried to hide my emotions, telling myself and others that I wasn’t afraid. My self-deception didn’t help much, however, as long as I was really afraid.
As a demolitions expert I learned that fear was not to be denied, but controlled. My survival and that of my comrades often depended on my ability to act as though I was not afraid, even while in the grip of terror. This struggle cost me all the energy and willpower I could muster. My mind and spirit were being permeated by fear that threatened to control me.
As a chaplain I knew that God’s influence was much more powerful than the apprehension I fought when I jumped from a plane. Still, fear darkened my spirit and clutched at my guts, mocking my faith. Why couldn’t I shake it? I returned from all jumps emotionally exhausted from the inward battles. Fighting the constant fear drained me.
You may be living in a situation that often brings fear into your heart, and you may be doing your best to persevere. Yet fear and frustration persist. Since my parachute-jumping days, I have learned things I wish I’d known long ago.
Learning to Defeat Fear
My journey of discovery began as I learned to praise and thank God for all the circumstances in my life, the difficult as well as the good. As I thanked Him for the things I feared most, an amazing thing began to happen: the fears subsided. Slowly it dawned on me that there is a way to conquer fear, and that we can learn how to be delivered from its insidious power. I had taken the first step when I began to thank God for my fear rather than in spite of it. As long as I fought fear by denying or controlling it, I was in its power. When I admitted being afraid and thanked God for my circumstances and my own helplessness, the opposite of what I expected happened. Instead of being engulfed by terror, the power of fear was broken, and the things I feared were much less formidable.
It is a curious paradox that as long as we fight fear, it remains our tormentor. But when we meet it with gratitude and faith, it is defeated and, in fact, becomes our ally.
It’s been a sometimes painful but wonderfully exciting journey to work toward freedom from fear.
Chapter 2
Controlled by Fear - Or by Faith?
We live by fear or by faith, and the one we choose makes all the difference in the world.
God has provided me with abundant training in what it’s like to be afraid. At the time I did not appreciate His methods, but now I see His careful attention to the details I needed to understand. I have learned that life is like a school; we must graduate from one grade in order to advance to the next. So I am describing a few of the classes I was required to attend.
Walking through minefields during World War II really got my attention. I learned that fear could cause me to perspire even in freezing temperatures! On one occasion as we inched through the Black Forest in Germany at about one step per minute, we perspired so much that our clothing became soaking wet. In our training we had been told how dangerous minefields were, but our reaction usually was, I hear what you are saying, but it’s not relevant – that will never happen to me.
But the horror of seeing other men blown apart by mines gave me ample reason to be terrified. Every time I put a foot on the ground I thought it might be my last step. At the time I had no understanding of how to have faith that God would take care of me. I did not realize that He wants to daily guide our steps. You are not likely to walk through military-style minefields, but similar challenges may lie ahead of you. I pray that your journey toward faith will be an exciting pilgrimage into ever-higher levels of faith.
A healthy, natural fear alerts us to danger, and helps us live in our corrupted world. But when fear is exaggerated or misdirected, we suffer. We are robbed of faith, joy, strength, and possibly even life itself. The Bible tells us 365 times not to be afraid. God wants to encourage us to be fearless. He also wants us to know how dangerous and destructive fear can be.
Consider the human body. Reasonable fear protects us from foolishly putting ourselves at risk. But too much fear can destroy the body. It can make the heart race, our blood pressure rise and can cause other internal reactions that are harmful to us. That is simply the way God designed us.
Medical science reveals that if we spend years worrying that we may someday get a certain disease, the fear itself could eventually create it. If we are ill, fear may even prevent us from getting well.
We are not helpless victims of the things we fear most: misfortune, pain, poverty, loneliness, ridicule, failure – even death. Some of these things will indeed happen, but the Scriptures tell us not to fear them. Fear may try to stalk us, but faith can conquer it. God did not design us to be dominated by fear. And we have the power to choose to live by the power of faith.
Fear mocks, “Yesterday was bad, today is horrible, and tomorrow will be even worse. And you can’t do anything about it.”
But in faith, each of us can declare, “God was with me yesterday. He is with me today, and He will be with me forever. I can do all things through Christ who gives me strength. Because of Him I live.”
Fear wants us to retreat and shrink back because we think our efforts will lead only to failure.
Faith encourages us to advance. It causes us to believe that we can succeed. Then we can move boldly forward from triumph to triumph.
Fear wants us to turn away from spiritual battle until eventually we forget that a battle is being waged!
Faith inspires us to be bold for God.
Fear is an opiate. It drugs us into thinking that we don’t have to do what God would have us do. It makes us relax in our easy chairs and expect someone else to do what we should be doing. Fear can make us indifferent, apathetic, and even cowardly. Faith gives us the confidence to do what needs to be done. Faith motivates and strengthens us. It stimulates, challenges, and gives us courage to persevere and overcome.
Fear can affect the way we feel; it can also contribute to the way we look and act. When fear controls us we may look tense, angry, or depressed. When fear controls us our troubles and trials seem too much to bear. Our shoulders are slumped. We feel terrible, and we show it. Or we clench our teeth behind a mask of forced cheer, denying to ourselves and to others that fear exists.
In contrast, faith causes us to pull our shoulders back. Our steps become lighter, and whatever our troubles, they become a hundred times easier to bear. Believing that God loves us and works in everything that happens to us for our good, causes our hearts and minds to work better. High blood pressure decreases. Tense nerves relax. Attitudes change, and we smile more. Faith enables us to be joyful whatever our circumstances may be.
Joyous believing can cause us to:
•   be more successful.
•   have new friends.
•   have a better marriage.