Foreword: I thought I’d give a little background into how this testimony came about, because it simply demonstrates how often God works wonderfully in us and there’s only goodness when we submit to His will.
For some days now, my wife has told me that she hasn’t been able to sleep well because God has prompted her time and again to write her testimony down.
She asked me why, and I told her testimonies were a good way for us to glorify God through telling others what He has made anew in us. As to why God is telling her to do so I am not sure, yet we need trust that the Lord has need for her to do something that has not been revealed, but it’s all good.
And we know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose.
Romans 8:28
We had retired rather late to bed last night. Just 15 minutes later, she was out of bed, and the study light came on while her computer whirred to life. When I popped into the study to ask why she wasn’t in bed, she was quite in tears, telling me that God had admonished her for not submitting to His will, right after prayers.
She had been fighting the burden in her heart to write her testimony down, believing wrongly that it’s rather pointless.
It was the first time she had experienced such a prompting, so I gently told her that that’s what God does with me many, many times over — a feeling so heavy in one’s heart that you go on your knees and cry out saying, “Father, Lord, I’ll obey and do it!”
I made coffee for us and stayed up with her while she completed her testimony which we are now sharing with you. May it encourage and bless you as it has us.
MY TESTIMONY
by Karen
Being born of Roman Catholic parents into a Roman Catholic family, I was brought up to attend Mass every Sunday morning, dutifully performing special prayers on specific days as mandated by the Church and to not eat meat on Fridays. I vaguely remember my First Communion ceremony where I was dressed up like a young bride and after which I was showered with various gifts which included my first rosary and a multitude of scapular medals and crosses that had all been blessed by a priest. Our house had the ubiquitous altar adorned with statues of Mary and Jesus with pictures of the Sacred Heart or Pope in some other rooms of the house.
My dad was a manager in a shipping company while my mum was a housewife and during their courtship, he was in charge of the library at our parish Church (St. Francis of Assisi, Jurong). It was also during this time that he had a disagreement with the parish priest over the running of the library and thereafter, stopped attending church. Thereafter, my mum and I were also publicly snubbed by this parish priest because of this disagreement. We had no choice but to keep attending that church because there was no other Roman Catholic church in our immediate area. During my childhood years, I remember my dad arguing with my mum about going to church every Sunday because of his dislike of that priest. Later on, the arguments were fewer but he rarely ever attended any Mass in any other church ever again.
Dad was also a lover of old movies so on some nights when there was nothing worth watching on television, he would pop in a VHS movie such as Ben Hur or The Ten Commandments. It was also around this time in my early teens that after every screening of The Ten Commandments, I would head back to my room, look up at the family altar and wonder about the commandment “Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven imageâ€. I started questioning how my religion could so blatantly disregard this commandment from God. Disillusioned and confused, I stopped attending church and started on my search for any kind of religious truth.
During my secondary or high school years, I made the acquaintance of an insurance agent who had given a talk about financial planning in my school. Being the then insecure and shy teenager, I turned to him as a counselor and friend. It was only later on that I found out that he was a Christian. Our phone conversations were a mixture of him trying to sell me an insurance policy, telling me God’s Word and persuading me to purchase books by Norman Vincent Peale to boost my self-esteem. One night after a tiring day of dealing with my teenage problems, he started telling me God’s Word and finally ended with him leading me through “the sinner’s prayer” over the phone. I recall saying the prayer but I did it not out of a true conviction of my sins — I did it just to make a friend happy. Thereafter, our conversations decreased because I think he realized that I was never going to buy a policy and perhaps that, he had done his duty as a Christian to evangelize to me. The funny thing was that during those few months of interacting with him, he had never once given me a tract or ever asked me to attend his church (which particular church that was, I never found out either).
Heading into junior college, my immediate circle of friends were all atheists. One of these friends started playing with tarot cards and our gatherings would be fun-filled afternoons of tarot card readings. The idea of being able to predict one’s future was so enticing that I purchased my own set of tarot cards and did my own readings every night. My dabbling into the Occult went so far so to almost purchasing an Ouija board with my then best friend. I only stopped playing with tarot cards when I perceived to have predicted the break-up with my then boyfriend three months beforehand.
After junior college, I went on to attend a local polytechnic which is where I met Isaiah, my husband.
Early on in our courtship years, I found out that he was a Christian and my instinctive reaction was “Oh noâ€. When he found out that I was a Roman Catholic, he started evangelizing to me but by that time, I had developed such a disdain for anything Christian, both the Word of God and any evangelist who attempted to hand me a tract. Despite all my misgivings about Christianity, Isaiah continued to tell me about the Lord’s Second Coming and the Book of Revelation to which I nicknamed him my “Doomsday Prophetâ€. He even tried to get me to read the Bible but somehow my Roman Catholic upbringing got the better of me and I refused to read it for myself. He did, however, get me to attend a few services at his church but I felt like a fish out of water. I was not prepared for the lack of pomp and systematic prayer that I had experienced during my childhood every Sunday morning.
One particular conversation I recall vividly was how he said he wanted to see me in heaven because he loved me and was worried about my soul. Till this day, I remember my immediate reaction was “What kind of emotional blackmail is this?!†I could not accept the idea that just because I did not believe in his God that I would be heading for hell. My fear and conscience continued to clash throughout our courtship years. In spite of my rejections, he never stopped evangelizing to me but my need to ease my conscience caused me to develop a belief that there was a God but it didn’t matter which God I worshipped. This belief of Universalism did not last long however.
Three months before our wedding, my dad collapsed in the bathroom and passed away of a heart attack. I became angry with myself thinking that I was partly to blame for his death due to the stress in preparing for our wedding. But most of all, I was angry with God for taking away the man who was going to walk me down the aisle. My mum started slipping into a depression.
In accordance with Chinese traditions, I had to move in with my in-laws after the wedding so we spent many nights traveling from my in-laws’ home back to mine to take care of her. It was also during this time that I sinned the most. I bought books such as the Nag Hammadi and vehemently debated with Christians and Isaiah on the validity of the Bible. I also spent many nights out by myself or with friends drinking and partying and not returning home sometimes. My sinful life almost caused Isaiah and me to get a divorce but we pulled through that dark period in our lives and by God’s grace, grew closer emotionally.
After two years of constantly traveling back and forth between my in-laws’ and my mom’s, we finally found our own place nearer my mum. By this time, I was not only still dealing with anger but also with guilt for not being there for my mum after my dad’s passing. A year after we moved in, the grief of my dad’s passing finally hit me and I slipped into a depression. I dealt with everything by getting drunk in the afternoon and it was only when Isaiah came home one evening and found me drunk that I realized I had hit rock-bottom. I knew that I needed God but didn’t know how I was going to find Him and if He would hear me if I called out to Him. And because I had never prayed to God directly before, all I could muster was the Lord’s Prayer every night.
Nine and a half years into our marriage, Isaiah came home with a new Bible and me still being in that state of semi-denial of God teased him about it. (I could not understand how he could buy another Bible when we already had four Bibles at home!). It was around this time that he started blogging and reading the Bible every night. I stopped teasing him but my conscience continued to nag me. So one night when I couldn’t sleep, something made me pick up that Bible for the first time. Instead of starting at Genesis, I flipped to the book which I had always feared reading – the Book of Revelation. As I read it, the fear which I had all these years disappeared and was replaced with tons of questions.
In the morning, I asked him about everything I had read and after he overcame his shock, he answered my questions and told me to read Daniel. So I read it and had more questions to which he again, patiently explained to me. That Sunday morning, Isaiah was surfing the Internet and came across a sermon by Pastor Steve Hadley of Harvest Reno Church who was expounding on the exact passages I was reading in Daniel. I believe that it was by God’s divine providence that He directed us to Pastor Steve and I thank God for it.
At this present time, I am making my way through the other books of the Bible and I pray that some time in the near future, I can be baptized as a Christian so that I can reaffirm my faith.
I would like to thank God for my husband, Isaiah, who through all these years has never stopped evangelizing to me, and being patient and loving to me. I would like to thank God for Pastors Steve Hadley, Paul Washer, John MacArthur and John Piper who preach sermons that are true to God’s Word and who always provide me a deeper understanding of God’s Word.
Most of all, I want to thank God for sending Jesus Christ to die for my sins because without Him I would still be leading a Godless life and indeed be heading to hell.
Amen.
Photograph “In Darkness” by WTL Photos.
Tags: Ben Hur, Hope, John MacArthur, John Piper, Occult, Paul Washer, Prayer, Salvation, Testimony, The Ten Commandments
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I am just curious about some things.
When he found out that I was a Roman Catholic, he started evangelizing to me…
Why? Are Catholics like subnormal Christians requiring an upgrade?
…my Roman Catholic upbringing got the better of me and I refused to read it for myself.
While Catholics are not encouraged as strongly to read the Bible for themselves (which is a pity), I believe they aren’t actually encouraged to not do so. In fact, most priests encourage their congregations to read the Bible by themselves, but I guess that a lot of them don’t.
I’ve noticed that you’ve posted quite a few commentaries on Protestantism vs Catholicism, I’ll browse through them now but just thought I’ll comment a little first =P
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sorry about that, i keep forgetting to say the most ‘obvious’ things - it is definitely heartening to see someone turn (back) to God, regardless of denomination. =)
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Dear Karen, :-h
I could feel the love of God and the conviction that His Word brings, as I read your testimony. I praise God for never letting you go, and I thank Him for prompting you to give your testimony. >:D
Jeremiah 31:33
But this shall be the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel; After those days, saith the LORD, I will put my law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts; and will be their God, and they shall be my people.
34 And they shall teach no more every man his neighbour, and every man his brother, saying, Know the LORD: for they shall all know me, from the least of them unto the greatest of them, saith the LORD: for I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more.I am taking a “Sentimental Journey” through the Bible on my Blog; presently I have posted Numbers. I was reading where the Lord, because Israel was so quick to forget the commandments of the Lord (not Moses) that He told Moses to tell them to put fringes on their garments to remind them of their duty to obey, Numbers 15:38-40. :-w
Point being you, in your early teens questioned the false practices of those claiming to be “Spiritual Leaders”, because God has written His laws in our inward parts, whether we choose to acknowledge them or not. We have no alibi.
Bless you for being obedient and sharing your journey with us.
Peace :-h
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Karen,
I want to share this scripture with you, also, which shows one of the many benefits of sharing your testimony:
James 5:19
Brethren, if anyone among you wanders from the truth, and someone turns him back, 20 let him know that he who turns a sinner from the error of his way will save a soul from death and cover a multitude of sins. [our own sins--speaking for myself, I have a multitude to cover] :-SSPeace and Blessings
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Dear Karen,
You are a blessing to me today and I would like to let you know that also the Holy Spirit has used you to answer my prayers on an issue the Lord asked me to do… share my testimony on my blog, but since I have been battling should I should’nt I ? don’t know where to start and I asked the Lord silently some days back to give me a sign that it is time for me to do this if it is His Will. guess what He has answered me. when I got up this afternoon I had a serious banging headache but I said must manage to reply cos I was filled with joy and excitment.
Isaiah, you are blessed to be a man of God and for not giving up on your wife I tell you so many men would have and am grateful to God that she knows that you held out for her so … that’s love.Godbless you karen and Isaiah. Love you.
keep your love alive in Jesus Mighty Name Amen -
It’s amazing to hear a testimony of someone who was able to break free from the Roman Catholic cult. I believe you are going to be a voice for others who have been in bondage to a spirit of religion. Often times I meet people that have been wounded, and severely misguided in the Catholic church, but I’m never quite sure how to approach them.
God has taken your experience and turned it into a wonderful testimony that is going to set other people free! You now have the “approach” because you lived it!
God bless you, and thank you for your obedience. I am truly blessed by your testimony today.
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Thank you for sharing your testimony. I too was a Roman Catholic.
I left the church at the age of 15 as I found it to be hypocritical in so many ways. It was many years before I invited Jesus in to my heart, although I had remained a believer and never doubted God was there, I just thought He was ‘up there somewhere’.Bless you both.
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This part got me so excited!!!! I would head back to my room, look up at the family altar and wonder about the commandment “Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image”. I started questioning how my religion could so blatantly disregard this commandment from God.
The Lord had His sights on you back then and I say this because you KNEW this was wrong and yet you questioned it! The Lord allowed you to see this - amazing! My mother-in-law has been a professional Catholic
most of her life and she teaches catechism class too. She will recite the verses against idolatry then look at you with a straight face and talk about praying to the Saints!!! Huh???I still have a hard time swallowing the fact that people can read something yet still not see it. But you did!!!!!
What an awesome testimony!!! I’m so glad both of you are in Christ!!!
God bless you both
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Karen -
That was such a beautiful story of redemption… I found myself in tears
through most of it. I am always overwhelmed how God lovingly takes
away the ashes we clutch and cling to and transforms them into beauty.
He has done the same for me and I love hearing how He has done so for
others.Your story of you and Isaiah as a couple working through such challenges
is a real inspiration too. I feel so privileged to get a little glimpse of the
two of you before eternity. It will be all the sweeter for friends like you.Blessings to you both, and thank you Karen, for sharing your story with
such openness and courage.~Michelle @ In The Life Of A Child.
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Dearest all,
After reading all your comments, I have been overwhelmed and truly been blessed by everyone’s encouraging words. Reading entries on all your blogs and your comments on Isaiah’s has always given me a deeper insight and fervor to devour God’s Word. Thank you Lord for this blessed fellowship!
kingskid - Thank you for those verses!

Carol - Unfortunately praying to saints and having specific prayers for them was something I could never understand either. So I can understand what you mean regarding your mother-in-law because my mum would pray to Saint Anthony if she misplaced an item (he’s the patron saint of lost and stolen articles) or she’d tell me to pray, then in her next sentence say, “Pray to Mary and ask…” without batting an eyelid! Oh, and don’t get me started on my experiences in my catechism classes. LOL!Babs - It’s good to meet another ex-Roman Catholic who has turned away from that religion.
During my Universalism stage, I too thought God was “up there somewhere” but what I realized was that what I believed to be a God was not THE God.childlife - Thank you Michelle for your heartfelt comment. I thank God for Isaiah for being the pillar of strength in our relationship with God’s Word as his foundation. Truly our relationship would have been non-existent if he did not have God in his life.
channelofhealing - I hope that you are feeling better and am happy to hear that you have decided to write your own testimony.
As Isaiah mentioned, I was questioning the purpose of writing my testimony because I didn’t want it to be a form of self-edification, rather if anything, it would be a way of edifying God. After God’s chastisement, I was shaking and in tears because I never had God speak so strongly to me before. Coincidentally, I was reading the Bible last night and read this in Hebrews 12:5-8:5 And have you forgotten the exhortation that addresses you as sons? “My son, do not regard lightly the discipline of the Lord, nor be weary when reproved by him.
6 For the Lord disciplines the one he loves, and chastises every son whom he receives.”7 It is for discipline that you have to endure. God is treating you as sons. For what son is there whom his father does not discipline? 8 If you are left without discipline, in which all have participated, then you are illegitimate children and not sons.
All I can say is that it was good to hear the Lord’s voice! Hallelujah!
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Karen, thank you so much for sharing your testimony. Though I never was officially Catholic, I grew up in a household that was “Catholic”. My stepfather prayed to all the saints, etc. Though he was a good role model, in that he spent time every morning in the Word, and praying (I didn’t realize at the time that he was not praying to the right “person”) I’ve learned since then, that praying to the saints and the Virgin Mary are not prayers that we should be making. Anyway, loved your testimony, and I thank the Lord, that you listened, when He spoke to you. Blessings to you, my sister in Christ!
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Hi Karen!
What a wonderful testimony! When God opens our “eyes”, it all makes sense, doesn’t it? When I came to the Lord, I was a Roman Catholic, but after my salvation, I came out of that dead religion. Unfortunately, my dad and brother are still very much involved. I pray that God opens their eyes, too.
I do have an honest, sincere question for you, or perhaps for your husband. If this is not the forum for that I will completely understand, but I truly am curious of something. According to your testimony, you were not a christian when you married, but your husband was. How does he reconcile that to the verses in Corinthians about being unequally yoked? I was always under the impression that marrying or dating an unbeliever was a big NO-NO. I only ask this because I dated an unbeliever, but had to let that go because of what God says in His word.
Thank you for taking the time to write out your testimony which has been a blessing to me.Libby
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Shalom, Libby:
Thank you for dropping by and I’m glad that you’re encouraged by Karen’s testimony.
The short answer to that, Libby, is (and I am not proud to say it) that I wasn’t much of a Christian then. I was a product of ’say this simple prayer to ask Jesus into your life’ evangelism.

God bless,Isaiah
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Thank you, Isaiah for your honest reply. How very refreshing. May God bless you and your wife. I, for one, am so glad she wrote her testimony as sometimes I get discouraged when I see my dad getting more and more into his “Catholic” faith. However, I must remember, God is greater and NOTHING is impossible for Him. Thanks for this reminder!!!
Libby
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Shalom, Libby:
Thank you for the kind words and blessings! For me, there’s no point hiding behind falsehoods. We are all human and we make mistakes.
Pray for him, Libby. Trust God to open his eyes and heart to discern. We all have some loved one(s) who aren’t saved that we need to pray fervently for.
In Him,
Isaiah
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I just wanted to comment on being unequally yoked. Yes, the Bible says not to be unequally yoked, but it also gives instructions if you ARE unequally yoked.
(believer cannot divorce the unbelieving spouse if that unbelieving spouse wants that other to stay - if the unbeliever wants the believing spouse to leave and divorce, then you should comply)(1 Corin 7:12-13) Plus even if you DO marry a believer and are equally yoked, there’s no guarantee that your believing spouse will remain in Christ - and vica verca.)
I don’t think if you marry an unbeliever that it’ a sin per se but the Lord told us this because he wants his believers to live peaceably, without quarreling, without a contentious wife, without an angry man because He hates divorce etc. He tells us this for our own good.
All marriages (man & woman) are blessed by God because it is a holy covenant in which God is the Author of. So that’s why it is not sin to marry an unbeliever but again, He tells us not to marry an unbeliever so that you don’t break that covenant and live peaceably. Plus the unbelieving spouse is ’sanctified’ due to the believer (1 corin 7:14)
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Just wanted to add an example of God sanctifying a spouse through the believer.
Noah and his family.
Only Noah found favor with the Lord yet his whole family was saved through the flood.
Gen 6:8 8 But Noah found favor in the eyes of the LORD.
Gen 7:1 1 The LORD then said to Noah, “Go into the ark, you and your whole family, because I have found you righteous in this generation. 2
Notice it says ‘I have found YOU righteous’ - not his entire family.
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Shalene - Thank you for reading my testimony and your blessings.
Sadly I did pray to the Virgin Mary early on in my Roman Catholic life but never prayed to any of the saints. I always found it weird how the Roman Catholic rosary is made up mostly of “Hail Mary”s rather than any other prayer like the Lord’s Prayer. Btw, if you have any other Maths questions, feel free to email Isaiah. ;;)Libby - Thanks for your encouraging words and I totally agree how it is a “dead religion”. The rest of my family are still Roman Catholics and I too pray that one day they will open their eyes to its heresies. I’ll be praying for your dad and brother as well.
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Very good testimony. The true church is made up of many believers who take the relationship of Christ personally. As real as a relationship with your Earthly father.
Tell your wife she is blessed for you to be there for her and not give up on her.
Lance
http://www.lancessoulsearching.com -
Isaiah,
I think I am in the same situation you were in. I am in deep love with a girl who is a Catholic. (I am a Christian). She is an incredible person with high morals and a love for Christ as well. I decided to break off the five year relationship because of the differences between Catholicism and Christianity. Since the breakup, which has been almost a year I cannot seem to get over her. I have depression now and she is all I ever think about. She has inspired me in so many ways over the years, helped me achieve so many many goals, and has been an inspiration to me. She is that kind of person everyone loves who brings a smile into the room, one who is sweet and one who can be trusted. I have learned a lot from this, but my heart feels completely torn and broken since i am not with her. She still said’s to this day, “I am waiting for you” but I cannot wait forever. Hear she is able to accept me, but I am not accepting her. I learned it’s not about religion anymore, but if you believe in Christ as your savior. I am in between the rocks and would love to be able to speak with you about this situation. Hopefully by the grace of God you will read this posting or someone will pass this along to you - thx email@ gsrdrver7@yahoo.com

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