About Us
“Meet Linda Strom”
(Interview with Nancy Grisham;
taken from Just
Between Us magazine, Fall 1997)
Meet
Linda Strom . . . a woman whose life has gone from ashes to
beauty. God is
using her healing from a painful past to help others with hurting hearts.
Linda Strom grew up in western Pennsylvania near a beautiful lake and rolling
hills. The old farmhouse she lived in looked peaceful.
However, peace was a rare commodity during the first 17 years of her life
because her father was an out-of-control alcoholic. By the time Linda reached
her teen years, life was filled with turmoil. She lived through the trauma of a
father who was physically abusive to her and a mother who was verbally abusive.
The one anchor in Linda’s life was her grandmother. She loved Linda
unconditionally and prayed daily for her family, often telling her, “God is
always greater.” She walked out faith in Linda’s presence, and it gave her
hope.
From the pain of a broken childhood, there emerged a woman God would use to
reach the hearts of the hurting. The truths Linda shares have changed the lives
of many different people from college students to inmates on Death Row. Her
story is a message of hope ... “God is always greater.”

Linda, how did your life begin to change?
In April of 1963, I married Dallas Strom. Unfortunately, I brought some
ingredients into my marriage that had been modeled to me in my home. Dallas was
a tease and seemed to enjoy watching me lose control. One day in anger I threw a
pot of hot baked beans at Dallas and hit him. He walked out the door, and I was
alone and desperate. As I was on my knees cleaning up the beans, I cried out,
“God, if You’re real, You’ve got to help me, because if You’re not, I’m not
going to make it in this world.”
That evening, Billy Graham was on TV speaking about marriage.
How I wanted to
change! But Dr. Graham said that in ourselves we don’t have the power to change.
Then he read John 1:12:
“As many as received Him (Jesus), to them
gave He power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on His
name.”
I wondered, “Does Jesus really have the power to make me
different?” He talked about God’s love for me. I had longed for love, but I
had closed my heart out of fear. That night I confessed my sins and my need for
God. A deep sense of being loved and belonging settled into my soul.
When Dallas
returned home I eagerly told him of my experience. I’ll never forget his
response: “It should be a lot safer around here if what you say is
true!”
Later that year Dallas attended a Billy Graham Crusade in Nebraska.
In the
car on the way home, Dallas invited Jesus into his heart. My grandma’s words
rang true in my heart: “God is always greater” ... and
truly is a God of healing and reconciliation. My heart was so full that I began
to share Christ freely with others. Then both my parents received Christ, and
our relationship began to heal.

At what point did you go into ministry?
Immediately, I knew I was called to share the Good News.
I did that where I
worked at Northwest Airlines and also at an airline school where I was a
teacher. However, in 1971 Dallas and I joined the staff of Campus
Crusade for Christ International, and we were also youth workers at a church
in Minnesota. In 1974 we moved to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and established
Discipleship Unlimited. Much of our ministry involves healing and
reconciliation.

What’s it like to spend time with Death Row inmates?
Over the past 11 years, we have developed some deep relationships with the
women on Death Row in Texas. One such woman, Karla Tucker Brown, one of the most
committed, on-fire Christians I have ever met, has a worldwide ministry from her
cell on Death Row. She proclaims the message of Christ whenever possible through
letters and television interviews. She also has a powerful prayer ministry.
As strange as it may seem, to walk into that Death Row Unit is like walking
on holy ground. We produced a video in which you see Karla at her trial before
she met Christ and the Karla we know today. The obvious transformation is
unexplainable apart from the healing power of Jesus Christ. That video is now
touching lives wherever it is shown. (The prison video is available for a $10
donation to Discipleship Unlimited.)
Pam is another Death Row inmate who is very dear to me.
She has asked me to
be with her at the time of her execution. About eight years ago, she began to
trust enough to share the pain of her past. As we prayed together and sought
answers through the Word, we were both amazed at the healing that took place.
The last time we were together, she shared about a passage from Scripture she
had been studying. Jesus was in the Garden of Gethsemane, in agony as He faced
His own execution. His sweat was as drops of blood and He fell prostrate on the
ground. He wanted His close friends to stand with Him, but they failed even to
stay awake. There is, without a doubt, a depth in our relationship with Christ
and with others that only comes through suffering.

What do you think is a key in ministering to broken people?
I think the key to a good ministry, whether it is in prison or in any church,
is as Jesus said,
“(His) Father’s house is a house of
prayer.”
If ministries are covered by prayer, the people who are doing that type of
ministry will have the discernment that they need. I don’t believe that you can
just take a book and say, “I’ll have this ministry in my church.”
There’s got to be a lot of prayer when seeking God and asking Him to give wisdom
and discernment.
Unconditional love is equally important. It was Jesus’ love that caused the
brokenhearted to flock to Him and made Him approachable. In our ministry, one of
our greatest assets is the love that flows from wounded healers, the people who
have come out of brokenness, the Mary Magdalenes. However, we also need those
who haven’t experienced that level of hurt because they bring security and
stability into the ministry.
Forgiveness is often the beginning point of our healing.
We usually need to
work pretty seriously on it. I was able to forgive my mother for the rejection I
felt from her. There was a horrible bitterness in my heart that seeped into all
of my other relationships. Any time someone got close to me, or if I felt any
rejection, I would quickly move away from the person because of all the extra
baggage in my life. Conflict used to be frightening. Now I realize working
through conflict can, with Christ’s help, produce intimacy in relationships.

In addition to your prison ministry you also have Healing For Your Heart
conferences. Tell us about these.
About 10 years ago, I started a Bible study. People started to come who had a
lot of needs in their lives. As God began to meet those needs, it became very
apparent that He was leading us to have a conference for people who were hurting
but who didn’t know where to go to receive help. Also, many of our volunteers
would leave the prison conferences renewed and deeply touched. They would
mention friends who needed help in addressing such issues as sexual abuse,
forgiveness, and their identity in Christ.
As a result, “Healing For Your Heart” conferences were started.
We teach on the
key issues surrounding being whole in Christ. We also spend a lot of time coming
into the presence of the Lord through worship. These conferences provide a place
where people from very diverse backgrounds can come together in a safe
environment and allow the Lord to minister to them.

What would you like to share with us in summary?
Something the Lord has recently been impressing on my heart is,
“Unless
you become as a child ...” This is one of the conditions that
Jesus requires in order for us to receive from Him. We need to know how to be
secure, trusting, and forgiving. God always refers to us as His children:
“Behold, what manner of love
the Father hath bestowed upon us, that we should be called the children of
God.”
(I John 3:1).
Most children are not phonies. They haven’t learned about put-ons, masks, and
wolves’ clothing. The Father is calling us to be like thatto put off all of
this, forgetting our false airs; receiving His life, freedom, and His Spirit of
liberty. When that takes place, you see the real power of the Gospel of the Lord
Jesus Christ that can set men and women free, regardless of background.
Our ministry is just allowing Him to use our liveslives that say,
“I
was without hope. I was wounded. I was weary. The Father made me His child and
started a wonderful healing process that continues to this day. I have a freedom
now that I never knew before, and that’s only through the Lord Jesus Christ
coming in.”

You can also watch Linda’s February
5, 2001, TV interview with Terry Meeuwsen on “The 700 Club.”