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 ‘The Tip of My Finger Is All God Needs’

Ross Craig’s family thought he would die young, but now he’s an Adventist pastor.

Maharani Lumban-Gao, Hope Channel International, for Adventist Mission
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 ‘The Tip of My Finger Is All God Needs’
Ross Craig (right) with his brothers, about 1978. [Photo: courtesy of Ross Craig]

Ross Craig was shocked when his siblings told him what his parents had done.

“When they bought their plots at the cemetery, they also bought one for you because they thought you would die first,” they said. “For the past 20 years, we’ve been waiting for a phone call telling us that you had been murdered or overdosed.”

Ross grew up in Queensland, Australia, with recently baptized Adventist parents. He attended an Adventist primary school and then a public high school, where he discovered there was more to the world than the Adventist community. He graduated and moved to Brisbane to pursue a college degree, and there Ross began to drift from God.

He took a job as a bartender to pay his tuition and rent. Ross began to use illicit drugs and even became involved in their manufacture. But no matter what he did to experience temporary happiness, he felt empty and unfulfilled.

One night, Ross walked toward Story Bridge, a popular spot for people seeking to end their lives. Suddenly, two men approached him. Recalling the fateful experience, he says, “They asked me, ‘Do you believe in God?’ I answered, ‘Yeah, kind of. I used to.’ They then asked if they could pray for me.”

Ross doesn’t remember what the men said, but something in their prayer changed his mind, and he turned and walked away. He had taken 10 steps when he turned around to find out who the men were.

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“They had disappeared,” Ross says. “I had a clear view in every direction. They were either world-class sprinters or angels. That night, I realized that this was serious. I had done something that got the attention of Someone.”

Sometime later, Ross learned that his parents were seriously ill. He hadn’t been in contact with them for 20 years because he was ashamed of his addiction, but he felt compelled to see them again. Unfortunately, within several hours of his visit Ross’s father died, but Ross did care for his mother for six months. She asked him to take her to church each Saturday (Sabbath). Initially, he went merely to accompany her, but over time, he began to learn more about God and became convicted of his need for a Savior.

At church, Ross first discovered Hope Channel and Hope Sabbath School. He began listening regularly to the Hope Sabbath School audio podcast.

The podcast had a significant effect on him. He became more involved at church and immersed himself in God’s Word. As he studied, Ross began to understand God’s love and the transformative power of faith. People even suggested that he become a pastor! He could hardly fathom that God could use someone with such a dark past, yet he became convinced this was God’s plan for his life. 

“God can use anyone, because God loves everyone,” Ross says.

Ross is now an ordained pastor and continues to spread God’s message of hope to those struggling as he once did. “If my journey can help just one to reconsider God and take Jesus into their life, it was all worthwhile,” he says.

He tearfully recalls a frequent dream that his eldest sister had and shared with him. He was drowning, and she could see only the tip of his index finger above the water. But that was what she grabbed to bring him back. 

“It’s never too late,” Ross says. “Even if it’s just a finger that’s above the water. That’s how powerful the grace of God is. The tip of the finger is all He needs.”

The original version of this story was posted by Adventist Mission. Maharani Lumban-Gao was a social media specialist at Hope Channel International when she wrote this story.

Maharani Lumban-Gao, Hope Channel International, for Adventist Mission

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