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Paul Washers Story
Paul Washer

Paul David Washer (1961 - ). American evangelist, author, and missionary born in the United States. Converted in 1982 while studying law at the University of Texas at Austin, he shifted from a career in oil and gas to ministry, earning a Master of Divinity from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. In 1988, he moved to Peru, serving as a missionary for a decade, and founded HeartCry Missionary Society to support indigenous church planters, now aiding over 300 families in 60 countries. Returning to the U.S., he settled in Roanoke, Virginia, leading HeartCry as Executive Director. A Reformed Baptist, Washer authored books like The Gospel’s Power and Message (2012) and gained fame for his 2002 “Shocking Youth Message,” viewed millions of times, urging true conversion. Married to Rosario “Charo” since 1993, they have four children: Ian, Evan, Rowan, and Bronwyn. His preaching, emphasizing repentance, holiness, and biblical authority, resonates globally through conferences and media.
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In this sermon, the preacher shares his personal journey of how he came to be a Christian and a preacher. He talks about having dreams of preaching as a young boy and his reluctance to accept that calling. However, after a conversation with someone who delivered a message from God, he realized he needed to surrender his life to Jesus Christ. He also mentions the challenges he faced in his early days of preaching, including people rejecting his tracks and mocking him. Despite these difficulties, he acknowledges God's faithfulness in his life.
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For more media content from Grace Community Church in San Antonio, Texas, go to gccsatx.com. Media used by permission of HeartCry Missionary Society. Visit us online at heartcrymissionary.com. My mother was converted when she was about 12 years old from a Croatian family. Her parents had come through Ellis Island. My grandmother on my mother's side was oftentimes persecuted for her faith because being Croatian and Catholic are almost synonymous. You're almost a traitor if you leave Catholicism. Plus, the only evangelical church she could go to was Serbian. And the Catholics and the Serbians are constantly at war. So for my grandmother to leave Catholicism and then fellowship with Serbians was oftentimes very looked down upon. She suffered. My mother was over at her girlfriend's house when she was 12 years old. And they happened to be Baptist. And she was playing with dolls up on the second floor. And the family was gathered around the piano and started singing hymns. And my mother said she heard the hymns, but all of a sudden such a great remorse and weeping of sin came over her that she started weeping so hysterically that they stopped playing the piano. They ran upstairs thinking she was injured. They shared the Gospel with her with regard to her sin and she was converted. And my mother eventually married my father. And both his parents, my grandparents, were some of the first Baptist missionaries to Brazil in Manaus back in I think the 20s and 30s. But my father was never converted that I know of. When I was 17, we were out building a fence and he yelled. And I grabbed him and we fell to the ground and he was dead. I had never known him to profess faith in Christ. At that point, basketball season was beginning and such. And I was one of the captains on the team. And I was the president of the Beta Club or Honor Society. Within just a few months, I digressed to getting finally kicked off the team and kicked out of the Honor Society. And I drank a lot. And people said that the trauma of my father's death led to all that when in fact, that's what I said, when in fact what I soon come to understand after I was a Christian was that my father's death gave my flesh a wonderful opportunity to do everything it had ever wanted to do. It just manifested what I really was. I was a liar. The best. I mean, I don't know how to describe me except look up jerk in the dictionary. It had my picture there. Conceited, self-absorbed jerk. And I went to Murray State University for a few years and then decided that I wanted to be an oil and gas warrior. Wherever that idea popped into my head, I don't know. Maybe it was because of the program Dallas or something. And the only place to do that was either Oklahoma or Texas. And I enrolled at the University of Texas. While I was there, I thought to myself, I can change my life. Not be such a jerk. Not be so self-absorbed. Not be such a liar. And nothing changed. Within a few months, I found myself right back into the same place I'd always been. And I noticed, I moved into a place called Plaza 25 there at the University of Texas. And I noticed there was a group of guys there that just seemed different. Just seemed very different. After a while, I came to understand they were Christians and they would have Bible studies and things like that. And I didn't pay much attention to them. And then one night in February, after I'd spent a semester there and just messed up my life altogether, I was sitting on the edge of my bed. It was like 1 in the morning. And I was on steroids really heavy. I lifted weights all the time. I wasn't any good at it, but I lifted weights all the time. And I remember crying. I hadn't cried. And I just kept saying to myself, I am so miserable. I am so miserable. And I looked down. I had some steroids. And I thought, if only these were some kind of pill that I could just take and die. But I knew enough from my mom. I believed that there was something. You didn't do that. And I just kept saying over and over, I'm so miserable. I'm so miserable. And it was like 1, 1.30 in the morning, and someone knocked at my door. And I thought, who's that? So I opened the door and here's this freshman. His name was Mike Moore. He was standing there. Not a very tall guy, maybe 5'8", 5'9", or something. He's standing there and he's kind of scared. I looked at him like, what? And he said, you're probably going to beat me up. I thought, yeah, you're probably right. And he said, I've got to talk to you. And although I knew him, I knew he was a nice guy and stuff, I didn't really know him. I said, what do you want to talk to me about? He said, look, God has been dealing with me for two weeks and I need to come over here and talk to you. And I've been scared. I can't take it any longer. I've got to talk to you. And I said, well, what? He goes, I just thought God wants me to tell you something. And I said, well, then I'm thinking, this is really strange. This guy's coming over with a word from God. I said, okay, well, what? He goes, you're just miserable and you're going to keep being miserable until you surrender your life to Jesus Christ. And we talked until like 4 or 5 in the morning and it really impacted me. And then I was reading. My mom had given me a Bible and I found it and I started reading it. And I came to Psalms 103. It says that man's days are like grass. As the flower of the field, so he flourishes. When the wind passes over him, he is no more. And the place acknowledges him no more. And that made me angry because that's exactly what I knew. I remember going to my dad's funeral and he was a very brilliant man. He was a powerful man in his own right. Just many things about him. But at his funeral, people were talking about other things like the weather, sports, what's going on in the company. It was like, this man just died. Shouldn't everybody just be quiet or something for a while? Shouldn't they think about him? And that verse where it says, the wind passes over and it's no more and the place acknowledges it no more. It's like he never even existed. I got angry and I kind of threw the Bible down on the bed. Then I walked over and I picked it up again and it said, but the love of the Lord is everlasting on those who fear Him. And that word, everlasting. Something everlasting. And then, I think maybe a couple times somebody visited me or something and then one day I was at the library, the undergraduate library at the University of Texas. And we were competing against other oil companies supposedly, other students. And we were running off some oil surveys and the girl on our team came up to me and she said, I'm going to have a party, I think it was tomorrow night, she said. And why don't you come to it? And I had kind of gotten to the point where I used to really party and things and I had gotten to the point where I didn't even do that anymore. I would just sit in a bar all by myself and drink. And so I looked at her and I said, no, I'm not coming to your party. And she said, why not? She goes, you never do anything. Why don't you come? Why not? And really, this is what happened. I didn't think about my answer. I didn't design it. Just all of a sudden, it came out of my mouth and it shocked me as much as it did anybody else in the room. I said, I'm not going to your party because I'm a Christian now and I'm going to follow Jesus. And I looked at the guys, they all kind of turned around and looked at me because they knew what I was. I drank, lied, just... And they looked at me. When they looked at me, it's like all of a sudden I realized what I said. And it's like a light just went... I mean, it's just like it wasn't a literal light. No, don't criticize me for that statement. It's a metaphor. It was just like all of a sudden, it was like, that's exactly what I'm going to do. I believe in Jesus. I do. I believe. I'm sitting there in front of these guys, I'm going, yeah, I believe in Jesus. I really do believe in Jesus. And I just walked out and then I started walking quicker because I was just like, what has happened to me? I mean, what has happened to me? I felt like I just knew. And I remember getting to the library doors, the outside doors, and I opened them up and there was a girl coming in who was in the same dorm. I didn't know this, but a whole group of people had been praying for me since when I first moved into the dorm like several months prior. They'd been praying for me. She was one of the girls. When I opened up the door, she goes, Paul, Paul, what's happened to you? And then I got scared. I got real scared. I was like, I don't know. And I just took off running. And I walked, ran as fast as I could back to the apartment and I found that guy. And I said, Mike, Mike, I'm really scared. Something happened to me in the library. All I know is I believe in Jesus and I am new. He said, you look new. And so he took me down to the guy who was like the RA who had been leading a Bible study named Mike Martin. And all these guys, Mike Martin and Stuart Depenia and Mike Moore, and all these different guys that had been studying the Bible together and were kind of leaders, you could say, like Campus Crusade and things. I sat down and I started telling them everything that happened. I'll never forget. One of them goes, you've been born again! And I was like, what's that? You know? And then, here's something. I had the filthiest mouth and it stopped. It just stopped. But I'll tell you what didn't stop. Lying. And after the joy of that day, I began to think about I had lied to people. And then, I mean, so many things in my life changed, but then I would be talking and something would just pop out that wasn't true. And before, I could just... it didn't bother me. I mean, I was proud of my lying. I could make anybody believe anything. And I would be so struck down by the Holy Spirit and so ashamed that I would have to go back and say I lied. I lied. And it went on. You know, it's amazing. Some things, drinking and cussing and everything just stopped. But other things were like this thing that constantly broke me, constantly broke me. And the Lord then gave me victory over it. And now, it's like one exaggeration. My wife says that I speak in superlatives. She says everything is the greatest to you. Everything is the biggest to you. And that's true, but even in that sometimes, the Lord just gets me. So that's why when some of you guys get real fired up for the Lord and you see someone else that maybe comes into your circles and yeah, it seems like God's done a work, but in one area of his life, he's really struggling for change, don't discount him or think he's unconverted. Sometimes the Lord will remove so many things, but other things we just deal with throughout our life. So, the next day, the study group that was there got together and they bought me a big ol' Ryrie study Bible. New American Standard. Ryrie study Bible. And I carry that thing to class. I mean, people literally... I mean, I remember my second day as a Christian, I'm walking back through the student mall there, and I hear a bunch of people over here and I go over there and look and there's this guy talking. And I thought, was he preaching? No, this guy isn't preaching. And he was teaching on just sharing about why sex is good, marriage is just an artificial institution, and promoting just wickedness. And I'll never forget, all of a sudden, just something. I just got so... And I just went through the crowd. You're lying! You're a liar! That's not true! So that was the beginning of my street preaching. My ministry was defined. Another thing that was... When I was a boy, 14, 15, I would have dreams all the time. Well, not all the time, but frequently. I would have dreams of me preaching. And I would wake up crying and telling God, I'll get saved if You promise me I don't have to preach. And so when I became a Christian, I also knew, basically, that I was going to preach. And I started going out like at the student mall there and handing out tracts and everything. And it was a real change for me because it went from kind of being a cool guy with a really nice car to people taking your tracts, girls laughing at you and throwing them back at you. And it was a time of just killing the flesh. But God has been faithful. God's been faithful.
Paul Washers Story
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Paul David Washer (1961 - ). American evangelist, author, and missionary born in the United States. Converted in 1982 while studying law at the University of Texas at Austin, he shifted from a career in oil and gas to ministry, earning a Master of Divinity from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. In 1988, he moved to Peru, serving as a missionary for a decade, and founded HeartCry Missionary Society to support indigenous church planters, now aiding over 300 families in 60 countries. Returning to the U.S., he settled in Roanoke, Virginia, leading HeartCry as Executive Director. A Reformed Baptist, Washer authored books like The Gospel’s Power and Message (2012) and gained fame for his 2002 “Shocking Youth Message,” viewed millions of times, urging true conversion. Married to Rosario “Charo” since 1993, they have four children: Ian, Evan, Rowan, and Bronwyn. His preaching, emphasizing repentance, holiness, and biblical authority, resonates globally through conferences and media.