Carlos Juan—Tampa, Florida, USA
LIFE BEFORE
KNOWING GOD
In the name of the Lord
Jesus Christ, I bear testimony.
I moved from Puerto Rico to
Florida, USA, when I was five years old. My family is middle class and I received
a good education. My parents are still married today, and I grew up with a lot
of love and support. But despite these things, I went down the wrong path. I
cannot point to a specific moment where everything went wrong; it was more like
a series of events, where things gradually went from bad to worse.
When I was eight or nine
years old, I was molested by a family friend who was babysitting us. I knew
intuitively that this was a shameful and disgusting act, but as a child I could
not process that what had just occurred was wrong. The perpetrator made it seem
as if it was normal. Perhaps, if I had told my parents, I would have received
the support that I needed to overcome this trauma. Maybe all I needed was a
loving embrace and some encouraging words from my mother to tell me that
everything would be alright. But I did not know any better and I dared not tell
a soul. From that point on, I became numb to the world, and I navigated through
life with a broken moral compass. Everything bad did not seem as such, and
consequences did not have the same impact on me as it did on others.
Descending
into Darkness
In
my early teens, I was blessed to go to a private school, where I was actively
involved in sports. But I was lost. I led multiple lives: one at home, one at
school, and one on the streets with the neighborhood kids. I tried hard to fit
in. At thirteen, I picked up a cigarette, and quickly moved on to marijuana. By
my late teens, I would buy a box of fifty cigars, split them open and replace
the tobacco with marijuana. I would be high all day. I experimented with
everything: ecstasy, LSD, Xanax, cocaine and alcohol. Ecstasy will destroy you
mentally: it plays with the brain’s melatonin and serotonin levels; I have
trouble sleeping to this day. Xanax is a muscle relaxant that slows your heart
rate and can be fatal if abused. I have had several friends die in their sleep
from mixing Xanax and alcohol. I have blacked out and woken up in strange
places—on the floor in a random house, in my front yard, in a car with the
engine running in an empty parking lot—with no idea how I got there.
By
age twenty-five, I was a mess, with no clue as to how I came to be like this.
By this time, I already had a child, but was completely out of control. My
parents had lost all hope. My friends and I put poison on the streets, selling
large amounts of marijuana and cocaine. We got into fights and drank till we
passed out. I can look back now and see how stupid it was; there were many
times I acted recklessly and put my life at risk, narrowly avoiding death. It
is only by God’s mercy that I am still here today.
Turning
Points
My
friend Americo once said to me, “If you look back and replay different moments
in your life, you can see that Jesus was with you all along.”
One
day, I prayed to God to deliver me from my dependency on drugs. I was basically
high all the time, and I no longer wanted to live like this. I was not sure who
I was praying to, but I prayed in faith. Amazingly, after that prayer, every
time I smoked marijuana I began to experience panic attacks. So I stopped
taking drugs altogether. However, my addiction moved to alcohol, to the extent
that I would drink an entire bottle of tequila in one go. Once again, I reached
another breaking point, so I prayed to God again, since it had worked the first
time. Sure enough, I started to become sick whenever I drank alcohol, so I gave
that up. It is unusual to quit alcohol and drugs so easily. I still did not
believe in God, but, looking back, I can see that He saved me from the worst
physical and emotional effects of long-term drug and alcohol addiction. Now,
there are times I am forgetful and distracted—but at least I can pray, read and
remember the word of God.
When
I initially got into selling drugs, I set the goal of making five thousand
dollars, and then I would quit. But then five thousand turned to ten thousand,
and ten turned to twenty. You become accustomed to making easy money, and
working a regular job becomes challenging. Eventually, I got involved in music
production, nightclub promotions and concerts. Seeing this as my way out, I
partnered with someone in the industry and we set up a legitimate marketing
company, where we expanded into graphics, printing and sign-making for small
businesses. I felt like I was finally getting my life back on track.
SEARCHING
FOR GOD
Around this time, I had an
encounter with a fortune-teller, who shared things about my personal life that
no one else knew. I know now that fortune-tellers play for the wrong team—they
are not from God—but this incident started me on my journey in search for the
truth.
I was very serious about
searching for God, but I am a skeptical person. I went about it logically,
visiting Buddhist temples, Catholic churches (my family are devout Catholics),
and reading up on all the different world religions. I practiced Santeria (a
Cuban religion, mixing African voodoo with Catholicism), New Age and different
types of meditation. But after all my searching and praying, Jesus would
dominate my thoughts.
As I was looking for work
one day, I stumbled across a daycare where I could give a quote for a sign
replacement. This was when I met Brother Randy, Deacon Solgot’s son. When I
told him that I could return on Saturday to replace the sign, he said that he
would be at church that day. I was intrigued by a church that worshiped on
Saturdays, so I told him that I would like to go with him.
To Randy’s surprise, I
turned up at the True Jesus Church in Tampa that Saturday with my younger son,
who was three years old. I remember feeling so welcomed. I grew up with a
Catholic background, where the atmosphere of worship was very reserved. So when
I experienced the loud praying in tongues of the True Jesus Church, I was not
sure how I felt. I had previously attended a Pentecostal church close to my
home, but their tongue-speaking was not the same. In fact, my son had been
afraid at that experience. On the surface, they were worshipping God with the
right intentions, but now I can see clearly that the spirit was wrong. In
contrast, when my son and I witnessed the prayers of the True Jesus Church
members, we were not afraid, and everyone seemed normal when they got up
afterwards. My son knew before I did that this was the right church, which is
something I hold dear to this day. It took longer for me to be convinced. For a
period of six months, I would come and go and ask many questions. Even after
receiving the Holy Spirit, like doubting Thomas, I continued to look elsewhere
for the truth. Yet, the Holy Spirit always led me back to the True Jesus
Church.
Receiving
the Holy Spirit
About
three months in, I received the Holy Spirit while praying at church. Suddenly,
my tongue started to roll and I knew I had received the Holy Spirit. Even
though I am an anxious person, in that moment, I felt no fear. It was as if
there was no one else around me—it was just me and God.
However,
even after this experience, I had my doubts. As with many people in my
situation, I could not shake off my skepticism. We humans are constrained by
the laws of nature, but when God gets involved, He bends those laws. Our brains
do not have the capacity to process this kind of information. I began to
question God and the Holy Spirit in prayer. I fasted and meditated for four
days to gain clarity, but would refuse to pray, believing that the movement of
my tongue was something I was controlling. I was testing God. For those four
days, I felt empty and was a complete mess. By the fourth day, I had had
enough, but when I wanted to pray, I could not. I called Brother Randy, who
suggested that I put a prayer request to our prayer group, which we facilitate
through Google Hangout. When it was time to pray, I started to roll my tongue
with my own effort. But I knew this was futile, so I gave up. But as I stood, I
felt someone gently pushing me to kneel down and pray. There was a fire in the
pit of my stomach that wanted to burst out. I started to pray, and it was one
of the most powerful prayers I have ever experienced. After a long prayer, I
got up and felt full again—full of joy and full of life. It was an experience I
could never forget; God had answered my doubts. Since that day, I have never
doubted God again.
Finding
Home
One
time, I had a moment of crisis: I started to feel out of place; as I looked
around the church, I felt I could not relate to most of the other members. We
were just too different. I felt the need to connect with someone who looked,
talked, and thought like me. That week, I received a phone call from an old
friend who had given her life to the Lord. I accepted her invitation to attend
her church, and was pleased to see a couple of people there from my time in the
streets. One of them used to be a Santeria priest. He had even performed some
animal sacrifices and rituals for me when I was trying to avoid being arrested.
I was so glad to see that these old friends were alive and well, and had
completely turned their lives around to follow God. I remember standing around
in a circle with my old friends; we all had these big goofy smiles on our
faces. I really felt at home with them. But when the service began, just as
quickly as I had sat down, I got up and left. Although I was grateful to see
people who were just like me, who had a heart to seek after God, I felt as if
something was missing. It felt incomplete. The Holy Spirit helped me to discern
between true and false, and led me back home to the True Jesus Church.
There
are around forty thousand different Christian denominations. Having attended a
number of different churches, I have a good understanding of how they have
deviated from the early church of Acts. They may appear to be joyful, loving
Christians, who pray and serve God, but there is always something missing. The
word of God says that the Spirit will lead us into all truth, and without the
Holy Spirit, we will not be able to recognize truth from heresy.
SPIRITUAL
BATTLES BEFORE BAPTISM
In 2012, I decided to be
baptized. My older son chose not to join me (he would later be baptized in
2016), and I was not sure if it was the right thing to baptize my younger son.
Before my own baptism, it seemed as though the universe was trying to stop me.
I had several nightmares and visions. Things were tense at home and I was
struggling to transition spiritually from the world to the church. My younger
son was supposed to be baptized on the same day as me, in June 2012, but he got
sick. Although I was baptized, my son’s baptism had to be rescheduled. I
continued to have nightmares. I had a dream that a black panther was stalking
my son, carefully circling him. On another occasion, I was asleep and I could
feel a snake crawling on me. I can remember the thickness of the snake and the
feeling of it covering my neck. I could feel its scales pinching my skin as it
slithered across it. I jumped up quickly and saw it on my bed. After turning on
the light, I watched it crawl under my bed, and then it disappeared. I was
terrified. These events continued happening until both of my boys were
baptized.
Although I was a skeptic,
the presence of evil cannot be denied. Paul writes that we do not wrestle
against flesh and blood, but against powers and principalities (Eph 6:12). Even
though I had experienced all kinds of evil, fortune-tellers and voodoo priests,
I still wanted to deny these things and just live a normal life. But my life—our
lives as True Jesus Church members—is anything but normal.
Early on the morning of my
younger son’s rescheduled baptism, he had one of the worst asthma attacks he
has ever had. He had to go to hospital, and the baptism was again cancelled.
But after all I had experienced, I was certain he should be baptized. At the
third attempt, in October 2013, my parents had planned a vacation for us, but I
was not going to miss this baptism for the world. We woke up at 5 a.m. to drive
one and a half hours to get there on time. During the baptism, Brother Randy
received a vision of the water and the sky turning red. He started to cry. Two
families were baptized that day, and I was encouraged by the accompanying
signs.
THE
CHALLENGE OF TRANSFORMATION
Of course, baptism is not
the end of the journey, it is only the beginning. Titus 3:5 mentions “the
washing of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Spirit.” I had to be
continually renewed, but I took it one day at a time. For a while, I would
curse by mistake. But thank God for His conviction and for the gift of
reflection. Through my prayers, I was able to see clearly God’s will for my
life, which was for me to start afresh with new friends, new ways of thinking
and behaving. I still live in my old neighborhood, where I caused a lot of
trouble for other people. But miraculously, it is as if God has made me
invisible to them, so I never see anyone who may have a problem with me.
When you make yourself available
for God’s will, He will lead you on a different path, even when you remain in
the same location. I have had the honor of reaching out to several of my
friends. Some are happy for me, others think I am crazy. But one of them has
started coming to church, and another is baptized. Thank God that He was
willing to use me in this small way.
Learning
to Let Go and Find Peace
Today,
six years after my baptism, I am still single. This was extremely difficult at
first, after living the way I used to live. But I wanted to do things the right
way, and wait for the woman God would choose for me.
Less
than two years into my Christian walk, I met a beautiful woman with whom I had
an amazing connection. She was also a survivor of childhood abuse, so we felt
we could heal together. But the more emotionally involved we got, the less
clearly I could hear God. I could not focus in church services. Eventually,
Brother Randy pulled me aside and expressed his concern. I thank God for his
support and encouragement, because in that moment I realized that I had to make
a choice.
I
thought it would be easy to end the relationship. But feelings are funny, and
can rise up when least expected. One day, I was at home, having a shower and
speaking to God in my heart. I began to question why He would allow this to
happen to me. After surviving abuse and depression, and going through all kinds
of terrible experiences, it felt like meeting this woman was the one good thing
to happen to me. So for God to say that she does not belong to me felt so
unfair. The realization hit me that I was a victim of abuse and that I could be
alone forever. I was on my knees, crying in the shower—I was falling into a
dark place, spiritually and emotionally, and I needed to be lifted up. Then, a
piece of Scripture came to my mind:
“So I say to you, ask, and it will be
given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. For
everyone who asks receives, and he who seeks finds, and to him who knocks it
will be opened.” (Lk 11: 9–10)
This
strengthened me to say to God, “This is what you have promised, Lord. I am
asking for nothing but some encouragement.” In that moment, I felt a complete
peace; I knew that God was going to answer my prayer. I was even excited to see
how He would do it. After this, I went to the mall, but everything that could
go wrong, did go wrong. Someone took the parking space I was going to take; the
person in front of me at the tea shop dropped his change on the floor, holding
up the queue. As I walked out toward the food court, three church members
crossed my path. They were new to my local church, and lived nowhere near the
mall—in fact, in a different city. But their reservation at a restaurant was
cancelled, so they decided to get ice cream at the mall. These unlikely events
meant that I was entering the food court just as they were leaving—God’s
arrangement. Indeed, when we sat down to talk, they gave me the words of
encouragement that I needed to hear.
A
few months later, I was still speaking to my female companion, but I knew I had
to choose between my faith and my friendship with her. For a few days, I had
strange dreams about seeing her car, but the car was always empty. A couple
days later, she told me she had similar dreams too: she would keep seeing my car
on the road, but it would also be empty. She asked me, “What do you think it
means?” But I knew what it meant—I told her we could not talk any more. By
then, I was pretty rooted in the truth and could see where God was leading me.
Unfortunately, she had come to church a few times, but still had her doubts.
She was headed in a different direction, so we had to go our separate ways.
Without
the Holy Spirit, we are like a leaf blown by the wind. We will try to use our
own logic to figure out where God is. I feel privileged to have received the
Holy Spirit, because I have never been so rooted in the word of God as I am
now.
REFLECTIONS
ON GOD’S CALLING
There were many moments in
my life when I could have gone to prison or been killed. I have suffered from
depression and suicidal thoughts. There have even been times on my Christian
walk that I wanted to give up. But it is only by God’s mercy that I am still
here.
My sons are now aged ten and
twenty. They have both seen the change in me. The elder one has been with me
throughout this journey of soul-searching and seeking God. He came with me to
Buddhist temples, fortune-tellers, and so on. He was old enough to understand
what was going on and decide what he believed. I did not have to force
anything. He wrote me a touching Father’s Day card one year, saying that even
though I had not been a father to him for much of his life, I was there for the
best part—when I introduced him to God.
Both my sons know about my
past and all the negativity that came with it. I think it is right for them to
know, because the lifestyle of the streets holds a certain mystique for young
people. But I want to teach my sons that Jesus Christ is cool, and that He is
the true revolutionary.
In prayer, God has impressed
these Scriptures on my heart:
Also I heard the voice of the Lord, saying:
“Whom shall I
send,
And who will go for Us?”
Then I said, “Here am I! Send me.”(Isa 6:8)
And He said to them, “Go into all the world and preach the gospel to
every creature. He who believes and is baptized will be saved; but he who does
not believe will be condemned. (Mk 16:15–16)
If Brother Randy had not
invited me to church, there is a possibility I could be dead or in jail. So
these two verses affirm my calling to me, and I take my calling very seriously.
The calling of God seems so
clear to some people, but not so much for others. I believe the call is equally
clear to all, but only some are open to listening. There is a clear divide
between good and evil, and the existence of the one true God only becomes
clearer as you read the word, pray and attend church services regularly.
I am too scared to preach on
the pulpit, but I love to invite people to church and reach out to those who
are lost, and share my testimony. This is our true purpose: to use the gifts
God has given us to glorify Him. If cleaning is how you glorify God, then do it
to the best of your ability. I do what I can for the Lord, whenever I can. I
fall often along my journey, but get right back up. For me, the evidence of
God's existence lies in the change that takes place in all of our hearts, and
this motivates me every day to keep fighting the good fight.