TESTIMONY
		
		Kelly  Lohrke: A Lost Cause Found in Christ
		
		By Mia Evans-Saracual
                	The 700 Club
                	
		
		
		 
		CBN.com 
		 Kelly Lohrke: What they called it was hardcore punk rock.  That’s the kind of group of guys I hung out with. It just meant you did  everything to the fullest. If we were going to party, we were gonna party hard.
		Mia Evans-Saracual [reporting]: Kelly Lohrke lived to party  in L.A.’s underground punker scene.
		Evans- Saracual: Twenty-two years ago, what did you look  like? Describe yourself back then.
		Lohrke: Oh, tore up Levis. Leather jacket. Spiked blue hair.  That was the cool thing, the creativity you could do. I dyed my hair more than  women back then.
		Evans-Saracual [reporting]: Heavy drug use fueled his life. 
		Lohrke: It just never ended.   Taking acid two or three days, taking PCP.  Then somebody would have cocaine. It was an  escape from my problem. It was an escape from everything. 
		Evans- Saracual [reporting]: Nothing calmed the seething  anger that set in when he was a child.  
		Lohrke: My dad left my mom when I was six weeks old, and I  grew up not having a father. My mom worked long hours. No parents’ supervision  so my house became the hangout. 
		Evans-Saracual [reporting]: Kelly’s after-school routine  involved getting high with his buddies and throwing wild parties.
		Evans-Saracual: So, you pretty much controlled the house
		Lohrke: Yeah, I did. 
		Evans-Saracual: Things between you and your mom turned  violent. 
		Lohrke: Yeah, they did. She tried to discipline me, and I’ll  never forget. I remember my mom yelling at me and hitting me, then I turned  around and I hit her back.
		Evans-Saracual [reporting]: What happened next blindsided  him. He wanted to smooth things over with his mom. He thought opening up to her  about his drug habit would help. 
		Lohrke: She freaked out. Man, it was just too much. Within  24 hours, I was locked up.  
		Evans-Saracual: Locked up where?
		Lohrke: At a mental institution. It was hard, because I was  just a kid. I wasn’t crazy; I was just on drugs.   I was more high in there than I was on the  streets. They were giving me Thorazine and Percodan. I came out worse than I  was when I went in. I came out more angry, more upset.
		Evans-Saracual [reporting]: And more reckless…he sold drugs  and partied with his punker friends day and night.
		Lohrke: It brought a sense of fulfillment, but I was empty  at the end. I always left empty. I felt I had identity. It was the message:  rebellion. Don’t listen to the government; don’t listen to your parents. 
		Evans-Saracual [reporting]:  That attitude got him kicked out of every high  school in the county... And his own house. At 16, Kelly was on his own. 
		Lohrke: I’m shooting up cocaine, crystal meth. Pretty much  whatever I could stick in my arm. I was so addicted. I’d been sick, had  hepatitis, lost everything, dealing the drugs. I had nothing left. The girl I  was living with left me. I was by myself completely. I remember I needed a  place to stay [because] I had nowhere to go.  My grandfather had a house there in L.A., and  he had renters there. They were Christians. 
		Evans-Saracual [reporting]: Kelly’s grandfather made an  arrangement with the family. Albert and his wife agreed to let Kelly move into  the garage apartment, and Kelly brought along his bad habits.
		Albert: When I first met Kelly, I was doing a Bible study, and  so I told the Bible study folks that we needed to pray for Kelly. He was either  gonna get saved or he was gonna move out, because I wasn’t gonna have somebody  living in the back like that. That’s what we began to do.  
		Evans-Saracual [reporting]: Albert and his wife Yolanda  believed God would intervene. 
		Lohrke:  Next thing  you know, I’d be having these crazy dreams of the Rapture, Heaven and Hell. I’m  like, ‘Man, this is like really messing my fun up here!’ This went on about  three weeks. 
		Evans-Saracual [reporting]: Then, on a three-day meth binge,  Kelly’s path took a dark turn. He became homicidal behind the wheel.  
		Lohrke: I felt different that night.  If I could put all my anger for my whole life  in a bottle or in a day, it was that day. I’m driving on the freeway, and some  people pulled up beside me. They’re laughing at me. I ran them off the freeway.  Just ran them off! Just rage! I’m thinking, ‘I’m gonna hurt someone tonight.’ 
		Evans-Saracual [reporting]: Finally after several hours, as  the drugs wore off, the strange thoughts subsided, and Kelly drove home.
		Lohrke: I’m coming down, and this heaviness is hitting me  like a ton of bricks. But when I opened up that garage where I lived, something  hit me. The minute I walked in there, I fell to my knees and I began to cry. I  felt my body was tingling, and I didn’t know what it was. I know it was the  Holy Spirit now. I cried for two hours saying, ‘God, I’m so sorry. I can’t do  it no more. I can’t live like this.’ I didn’t know what I was saying. I didn’t  know what I was doing. I knew Jesus. I heard that name. I knew God. I was just crying  out for Him.
		Evans-Saracual [reporting]: Kelly immediately told Albert  what happened.
		Lohrke: I go, “Dude, something just happened to me. I think  I just gave my life to Jesus.” That was it. 
		Albert: We knew the power of prayer. God did the rest. 
		Evans-Saracual [reporting]:  The next day, Kelly went to church with  Albert’s family.
		Lohrke: The pastor was preaching. At the end, he gave an  altar call, and I knew I had to go up there.
		Evans-Saracual [reporting]:  The power of God set Kelly free from his  addictions. 
		Lohrke: I never got high one day in my life after that day  in that garage. Never smoked never drank, nothing. And I didn’t even want it.
		Evans-Saracual [reporting]:  Kelly says God healed him of an incurable  disease.
		Lohrke: They prayed with me, and I got healed. The doctors  said, “It was a miracle you don’t have it.”
		Albert: God brought deliverance, because that’s who He is,  the Great Deliverer. What I’ve seen God do in him, God can do in other people.
		Lohrke: Little did I know, God had a destiny for my life to  be a pastor, and I’m now preaching all over the world. 
		Evans-Saracual [reporting]:  Kelly and his wife Esther lead the  congregation at Praise Chapel Christian fellowship in Kansas City, Missouri.  They share the eternal hope found in Jesus Christ.
		Esther: Twenty years ago God knew who he was going to bring  together, and  little did I know that  this was gonna be the outcome… just thousands of people coming to Christ. 
		Lohrke: Jesus came to reach the worst. He wants to use  imperfect people. The weak people He makes strong. I’m just a punk rocker that  got saved in a garage that everyone gave up on. I don’t deserve to be here. God  is a God of grace and mercy. Sometimes I look and say, “God, You’re using me?  You remember who I was?” And He says, “No, I don’t, because I’ve forgiven all  that.”
        
		
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