AMAZING STORIES
		
		Julie Lyons: Coming Out of the Dark
		
		By Cynthia Savage
                	The 700 Club
                	
		
		
		October 22, 2010
		
		 
		CBN.com 
			 For years, Julie  Lyons was a crime reporter for the Dallas Times Herald. Her curiosity took her  down some very dark alleys.  
        “It was such a  violent time," she tells The 700 Club. "The drug trafficking was so open and in your face.   I saw life just being snuffed out   randomly and casually.   I wanted to  document that somehow, because I knew it had meaning”
        Her boldness as a  reporter was a result of her childhood fears.
        “When I was a  kid, I was terribly afraid of the sirens when I would hear them in Milwaukee,  and I always thought something terrible happened to my family.   I think I was such a fearful, shy,  insecure kid, lonely kid that one of my ways of facing my fears was  taking it head on, and putting myself in situations that were on the edge.”
        Julie’s  insecurities brought on years of loneliness.
        “I remember at  seven, we had moved to a new city in Michigan.    I had no friends.  At that  age, that's when I first recall having a very strong attraction to girls, having crushes on girls at school like  usually who had qualities that I lacked.   They were popular or socially at ease or were perceived as being cute.”
        As an adult, Julie’s  attraction to females intensified.
        “I was consumed  with sexual thoughts at times. Toward men and women. There was this hole in my  soul and it was a feeling that I had been rejected and was condemned to a life  of being unloved. In a perverse way, it helped me deal with loneliness and  feeling rejected and unloved and not whole.”
        She was raised in  church and knew what the Bible said about homosexuality.  But Julie felt powerless over her sexual  impulses.
        “I was wrestling  with things that I knew were sinful. I didn't know if I was going to be  consigned to live forever grappling with these feelings. There was a lot of  shame as well.  I didn't even pray about  it directly.  Because just saying the  word, saying something like, ‘Lord, help me with these homosexual feelings.’  I didn't want to name it. I think that given  the right circumstances I could have fallen into a relationship with a  woman, even a sexual relationship, and I  thank God that that never happened.”
        At 25, Julie took  a deeper look at her Christian faith.
        “I began seeking  God, really out of desperation. I realized at that point that my faith was a fraud  in many ways. I accepted this watered down, pretty good, powerless, pious kind  of Christianity. I read the Word and I read somewhere about how baptism is the  pledge of a clear conscience toward God. I thought, ‘Okay, all I can say Lord is I wanna follow You and  all I could think to do was get baptized.’   I experienced joy for the first time in my life. For someone coming out  of depression, it's a stark contrast.   You know it has to come from God. I received the fullness of the Holy  Spirit.”
        Through prayer, Julie  was delivered from depression and same sex attraction.  
        “My life was very  different in that I had power I didn't have before over sin. There was  definitely a before and after.”
        Julie grew  professionally as a journalist.  But she  didn’t take her new found freedom in Christ for granted. She looked for a  church to support her commitment to purity. She found that church through an  assignment on former crack addicts in South Dallas.        
        “While I was  working on the story, I met people who were totally strung out receive prayer  and the next day it was gone.”
        Their testimony  of redemption gave Julie confidence to maintain a life free from sexual  sin.  The Body of Christ Assembly became Julie’s  new church home.
        Pastor Fredrick Eddington   shares, “One of the things that struck me about Julie was her  openness and her honesty, which lends to your deliverance. ‘You shall know the  truth.’  Not only the truth about God but  the truth about you.”
        Julie says “Well,  if you are a crack cocaine addict or you have a same-sex attraction or you’re  depressed and sitting in a corner in darkness, you can't take some kind of lame  approach, some indirect approach to sin. You've got to take it head on and deal  with it.”
        Julie continues  to lean on her church family for support, but today, she also shares life with  her husband Larry and their son Connor.
        “Larry has been a  brave man.  It takes a special man to  walk that walk with me and he is that man. If we begin by repenting of our sin,  He will take us on a journey to totally transform and renew our minds. He will  do that. It requires obedience. If you  want to be whole, you could be as whole as you want to be through the power of  Jesus Christ.”
        Can God change your life?
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