New Life Assembly Of God / Women's Ministry

New Life Assembly Of God / Women's Ministry NLAG Women's Ministries Women with a heart that chases after God ...
Sisters , Mentors , Friends .. Family....

04/12/2026

She couldn't walk to church. She couldn't visit the poor. She couldn't teach Sunday school or organize charity drives. For nearly five decades, Charlotte Elliott barely left her bed. And it was destroying her from the inside.

Born in 1789 into a privileged English family, Charlotte had everything ahead of her — talent, education, wit, charm. She painted portraits. She wrote poetry. She was the kind of woman people remembered when she left a room.

Then, in her early thirties, illness took it all away.The diagnosis was never clearly named. But the result was unmistakable: Charlotte would spend the rest of her life as an invalid, watching the world move without her. Watching her brother preach sermons. Watching her sister-in-law organize charity bazaars. Watching her friends do the very things she ached to do for God.

She didn't feel forgotten. She felt worse than that. She felt useless.
Then, one evening in 1822, a Swiss evangelist named César Malan sat across from her at her family's home in Brighton, England. Charlotte, raw and honest, asked him the question that had been eating at her soul: "How can I come to God? I have nothing to bring. I can do nothing for Him."

Malan's reply was four words that would quietly change history.
"Come to Him just as you are." Not when you're healed. Not when you're stronger. Not when you've figured it all out or cleaned yourself up or finally become the person you think you should be. Just as you are. Right now. As you are.

Charlotte carried those words for thirteen years.

In 1835, her brother was organizing a charity bazaar — raising money for a school for daughters of poor clergy. The entire family was busy helping: planning, building, setting up tables, preparing donations. The house buzzed with purpose.

Charlotte lay in her room. Alone. Unable to contribute a single thing.
The old shame came flooding back. What good was she? What could a bedridden woman possibly offer?

But then Malan's words returned: Come just as you are.
So that night, alone in her room, she did the only thing she could do. She picked up a pen. And she wrote — not for publication, not for posterity, not for Billy Graham or stadium crusades or television broadcasts that hadn't been invented yet. She wrote because she needed to.

Just as I am, without one plea,
But that Thy blood was shed for me,
And that Thou bidst me come to Thee,
O Lamb of God, I come, I come.

She wrote six verses. Each one began with "Just as I am." Each one ended with "I come, I come." Each one described exactly what she was: weak, doubtful, conflicted, broken. And each one said the same thing — God welcomes you anyway.

Her brother published the hymn in 1836. It spread quietly through England, then crossed the Atlantic, then kept going.

Charlotte Elliott died in 1871 at age 82. She had written over 150 hymns. She never knew — could never have imagined — what would happen next.

Because nearly a century later, a young evangelist from North Carolina began holding crusades in stadiums around the world. His name was Billy Graham. And when he finished preaching — when he asked people to make a decision, to stand up, to walk forward — he always played the same hymn. Just as I am.

For more than six decades, from the 1940s into the 2000s, that song played as people stood up in stadiums across America, Europe, Africa, Asia, and Australia. Over the course of his ministry, Graham saw more than 3 million documented decisions for Christ — countless of them made while Charlotte's words filled the air.

The woman who felt she had nothing to give wrote the words that became the soundtrack to one of the greatest evangelistic ministries in modern history. She never knew.

She came to God broken, bedridden, and convinced she was worthless. And from that exact place — from the rawest, most honest moment of her inadequacy — came words that told millions of other broken people the same thing someone had once told her: You don't have to be fixed first. You don't have to be strong. You don't have to have it all together.
Come as you are. You are wanted exactly as you are.

Charlotte Elliott: March 18, 1789 – September 22, 1871.
Invalid. Poet. Hymn writer.
The woman who felt useless — and accidentally changed the world.

“ Peace in the Wild - Women’s Conference “Just what we needed …Thank you to Our W M  Director: San Juanita Caballero for...
04/12/2026

“ Peace in the Wild - Women’s Conference “

Just what we needed …

Thank you to Our W M Director: San Juanita Caballero for caring for our ladies and pouring into their lives .
God bless you for all you do ..

Carol Kana
Jessica Gonzales
San Juanita Caballero

Know PEACE …. Gods Peace 🙏🏻♥️

03/15/2026
Women’s ministry Christmas party 🌲 Thank you for such a wonderful evening of love and lots of laughs .
12/03/2024

Women’s ministry
Christmas party 🌲
Thank you for such a wonderful evening of love and lots of laughs .

Lead Like A Girl
09/24/2024

Lead Like A Girl

I wanted to thank  sister Janie for hosting WM’s meeting last night. Dinner was delicious and most of all I want to than...
04/16/2024

I wanted to thank sister Janie for hosting WM’s meeting last night. Dinner was delicious and most of all I want to thank the Lord for the great weather. And the great fellowship.

Don't miss out, single mothers! A complimentary one-day ministry tailored specifically for you and your little ones is c...
04/02/2024

Don't miss out, single mothers!
A complimentary one-day ministry tailored specifically for you and your little ones is coming up!
Contact Our WM Director Sis. Estefana Stefanie Lucio for more details

Captivated 2024
03/24/2024

Captivated 2024

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707 Earl Street
El Campo, TX
77437

Telephone

+19796160753

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