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		It was D-Day. 
		
		the
		
		sixth of June, 1944. The 
		long awaited Allied invasion of occupied Europe had begun. My parachute 
		opened about 2:00 a.m., and soon the angry bullets were whizzing by my 
		ears. As I dropped toward the hostile battle ground in Normandy, I was 
		coming close to hell. 
		
		When I was a boy in Chicago, I had often attended Sunday School. I did 
		much thinking about God, sin, death and salvation. But when I became a 
		teenager, I tried to put such thoughts far away. 
		
		In the year 1942 I entered the U.S. Army and volunteered for duty with 
		the parachute troops. At this time I professed to have no fear of man, 
		death or God. But, after a trip overseas, my proud arrogant attitude 
		began to change. In the British Isles I was witnessed to by Christian 
		soldiers and chaplains. I began to realize my guilt before a Holy God. 
		As we were poised for the invasion, my heart began to fear . Then 
		later, watching others die in Normandy I knew I wasn't prepared to die; 
		I knew I needed peace with God. 
		
		On the fourth of July, 1944, some German soldiers caught me in their gun 
		sights. As the bullets came in my direction, I was a fit subject for the 
		righteous judgment of God, but also an object of His love and mercy. 
		When the bullets hit me, bne [sic] missed my heart by just twelve 
		inches. I missed hell by 12 inches! God in His mercy spared me. 
		
		With the end of the war, a measure of peace came to a troubled world. By 
		this time I had become religious and even called myself a Christian. 
		Others noted the moral change in my life, but, in spite of the outward 
		change, there was none within. The same anxiety about my sins existed; 
		no peace had come to my troubled soul. 
		
		After my return to the United States, I was stationed at Fort Benning, 
		Georgia. For two years I had been trying to find peace for my guilty 
		conscience, but now I began to realize that my religious efforts were in 
		vain and had gained no favor with God. This brought fear and despair to 
		my heart. What could I do? Must my ultimate destiny be in hell after 
		all?   | 
			
			
			On the fourth of June, 
			1946, the Spirit of God brought me to an end of myself and I was 
			reached by God's marvelous grace. I met a small group of soldiers 
			who had what my heart longed for; peace with God and the assurance 
			of Heaven to come. That night the light dawned upon me. I realized 
			that I was not only a guilty sinner, but a helpless one and could 
			never be saved until I ceased my vain efforts and believed on the 
			Lord Jesus Christ. I saw that the Son of God had provided my 
			salvation by dying for me - 
			"Having made peace 
			through the Mood of His cross." 
			
			(Col. 1:20) Later I 
			was to understand how the death 
			
			
			of 
			Christ 
			had met all the demands of God's justice and that 
			
			
			He 
			was thus raised from 
			the dead. But that night all I had to do was rest in the finished 
			work of Christ at Calvary. As I walked down a street at Fort 
			Benning, I 
			
			looked 
			up 
			
			
			into a 
			starlit 
			
			
			sky and 
			told God, "I believe 
			on the Son." 
			
			What peace filled my 
			soul! The burden of sin and guilt was lifted, and I leaped with joy. 
			I must have been the happiest young man in all the world. How 
			delightfully surprised I was 
			
			to 
			
			learn that salvation 
			was not by any human effort 
			or 
			
			religious observances, 
			but freely by the grace 
			of 
			
			God upon believing on 
			His Son. In spite 
			of all 
			
			my unworthiness, God 
			saved me from hell and made me fit for Heaven. Amazing grace! 
			
			-Fred Gladstone 
			
			**** 
			
			"For by grace are ye 
			saved through faith; and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of 
			God: Not of works, lest any man should boast." 
			
			(Eph. 2:8.9) 
			  
			
			Twas grace that taught 
			my heart to fearAnd grace my fears relieved;
 How precious did that grace appear
 The hour I first believed."
 
			
			—John Newton |