Now, she goes twice a month for an hour before the night shift begins. There were no "high pressure sales pitch, no Bible and no tracts," according to Stevens.
"The reason she was invited was because she didn't try to 'spread the word.""ĭuring her first visit, Stevens took a home cooked meal to the club and stayed for 45 minutes to hold conversation with the women. "She doesn't spread the gospel at Deja Vu, she just shows the girls love by listening, being attentive, and answering any questions they may have about life or faith," said John Sanchez, general manager at Déjà Vu, to CP. Juliet, Tenn., was bewildered but willing to serve so she made her first call to a strip club in downtown Nashville, where according to Stevens, the porn industry market is "huge." After telling the manager of Déjà Vu that she wanted to go to the club and take food for the dancers with no strings attached, she was surprised that he invited her the following week.
Stevens, who helps her husband, Todd Stevens, lead Friendship Community Church in Mt. I realized the homosexual, stripper, child molester, atheist, drug addict, Muslim and abortionist is not the enemy, they are the mission field," said Stevens to The Christian Post. "I had one clear direction from God, and it was "go feed the strippers." I had no idea what that meant, but it was pressing so hard on my heart that I had to obey. began after a pastor's wife fasted for 21 days in late 2012 for a new purpose, only to learn God was calling her to reach out to strippers and women in the porn industry. "Strip Church" ministry based out of Nashville, Tenn.