Latest CD, This Time Around (2011)
			  Hit songs include, “Hallelujah” and “God is  Still God”
			  Worship leader at Morningside Church, Port St.  Lucie, FL
			  Married, Tim
			  Three Children, Caedmen (deceased at 6 mos.); Skye, 8; and  Gideon, 7
                  				 			
			 
			
			
					 
		
		
		Guest
		
		Heather Williams: This  Time Around
		
		
		 
		CBN.com  A  SONG OF HOPE
  Heather  Williams had no idea her song, “Hallelujah,” which she had written in 2004  after her infant son, Caedmen, died would be used to touch and encourage so  many people.  It was written during a  very special moment between her and God after her son’s death as a one-time  prayer.  To Heather, it was like an entry  in a diary, very personal.  She tucked it  away.  Recently, her new recording label  encouraged her to record it.  Through the  song, God has done amazing things...even grander than Heather could have  imagined.  She says people identify with  her story and have learned not to give up hope.  Heather also says it is great to hear people's  stories of how the song has touched them.   A year ago at a women's event Heather talked to a woman whose son had  cancer.  He had to have his leg amputated  and is still battling the disease.   Heather and the woman still keep in contact and encourage each other.
        THE  STORY BEHIND THE SONG
          Heather and her husband, Tim, tried for many years to get  pregnant.  In 2004, nine years into their  marriage they had an absolute miracle when Heather gave birth to their son,  Caedmen.  He was such a blessing and  appeared to be a happy, healthy boy.  When  he was six months old, as the Williams family was returning home from a trip, Caedmen  started coughing.  Heather thought  nothing of it but as a precaution she called the doctor.  The doctor told her to bring Caedmen in.  There, they tried to feed him formula, but he  didn't want it.  As Heather was carrying  him back to the patient room, he suddenly sat up in her arms and contorted his  face. Heather knew something was wrong and then she knew Caedmen was gone.  The doctor told Heather to talk to  Caedmen.  She told her son that he could  go and be with Jesus and it was over.   Heather and Tim later learned that Caedmen had an undetected heart  condition called cardiomyopathy, an enlarging of the heart muscles.
        After the Caedmen died, Tim told Heather he believed God  told him that, “Not a year would go by without them holding a child of their  own in their arms.”  Some time after  that, Heather wrote “Hallelujah” and found out she was pregnant again.  Their daughter, Skye, was born on Christmas  Day 2005 – five days short of the one year anniversary of Caedmen’s death.  Shortly after Skye’s birth, Heather was  pregnant again.  The Williams’ son,  Gideon, was born the following year.   Heather says from going through what she did with Caedmen she believes  she takes parenting a little more seriously than she might have is she didn’t  go through losing him.  She has learned  not to sweat the small stuff and enjoy every little moment with her  children.  
        NEW  RELATIONSHIP WITH GOD
          Even though Heather had grown up in church and accepted  Jesus as her Savior when she was 18, she considers the day Caedmen died as the  day she became a Christian and her relationship with God truly started.   Heather  believes that though Caedmen’s life was short, God had a plan and purpose for  it.  She says her intimacy level in her  relationship with God was higher after Caedmen died.  She keeps an open dialogue with God and talks  to Him all the time.  She also completely  forgave the people in her life that had hurt her.  She says she is more afraid of who she might  have been if he did live.  Heather has  ultimately found that no matter what happens in life, good or bad, God is  faithful.  It is good to focus on what  you do have and not on what you don’t have and to learn gratitude.
        MORE  OF HEATHER’S STORY
          Heather's biological father left when she was very young.  Her stepfather, a borderline sociopath who had the family in church nearly  every time the doors opened, horribly abused Heather physically and emotionally,  even once chaining her to a tree.  “I  remember being 6 years old in Sunday School, and my teacher having us all sing  'Jesus Loves Me This I Know' and thinking, 'You're a liar.' I just couldn't  comprehend a God that loved me that would allow these things to be happening to  me.” Thus at an early age, Heather’s heart began hardening towards God and  filling with anger and bitterness.  Around this time, Heather’s love of  music began.  Music spoke to her on a  deeper level more than anything else.
At age 11, her mother gave Heather to the state because her  stepfather didn't want her around anymore.  Thankfully, her grandfather  took her in. “He was my rescuer.” Heather's grandfather also took her to  church, but by this time, she was so bitter and angry about her childhood that  she completely rejected church and God. The result was emptiness. “I began  trying to fill this hole in my heart with anything or anyone that I could.”  As a release from the pain, she started  writing music on her grandfather’s piano.    She tried alcohol around age 12,  “loving that it would take away a little bit of the sadness and the anger.”  When Heather turned 16, her grandfather retired to Florida, and she moved in  with her mom's sister and her husband. They took her to church, too. She still  hated it.
        By 18,  Heather was drinking, sleeping around, and staying out all night. She ended up  homeless for nearly three months because she refused to live by her aunt and  uncle's house rules. “I had people who would say, 'You can come in for a couple  hours, but you can't spend the night. My parents don't want me hanging out with  you.' It was a harsh reality check for me.”  
        A friend helped Heather find her birth dad, who told her  about a woman in his church who'd take her in. She knew she'd have to go to  church if she stayed with this woman, but she desperately needed a place to  live, so she moved in. This time, the familiar message she heard hit home.  “The pastor said, 'Jesus loves you just the  way you are. You don't have to scrub yourself clean to come to Him. You come to  Him the way you are, and let Him be the one to change you.’ ” The words pierced  Heather's heart.  “The next thing I know,  I'm up at the altar, and I'm hysterically crying. That was a big deal 'cause I  did not cry.” Heather gave her life to Jesus in 1994. “In that moment it was  like the weight of the world was lifted off of me.” 
        Heather  met her husband Tim in a band.  They  became close friends and then married in 1995.   Although she had accepted the forgiveness of Christ in her own life, Heather  struggled with giving forgiveness to others both in her past and present,  especially her mom and stepdad. Signs of anger and bitterness from her past  still affected her life and relationships.   There were struggles even in her marriage.
         Caedmen’s death broke  Heather's heart as well as the stronghold of bitterness and anger she'd carried  inside for most of her life. God brought her to the point of desperation over  her son's death, and the crushing experience of submitting to His will in the  matter forever changed her. “Only God can take that tragedy and almost make it  like it's the best thing that's happened to me.   I am more afraid of the person that I would be if he had lived.  Now God has completely humbled me and put me  in a place of total dependence on Him.”
	  
		
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