The Visions That Changed This Police Officer's Life

This former police officer joined the force in Franklin, Virginia, hoping to make a change in his community.
This former police officer joined the force in Franklin, Virginia, hoping to make a change in his community. (CBN News)

From Dallas, Texas, to Charlotte, North Carolina, to Ferguson, Missouri, deadly police shootings have rocked cities across the U.S.
    
Chaos, riots and racial strife sometimes followed.
    
Just miles away, however, these recurring incidents hit close to home for Terrance Howell.

This former police officer joined the force in Franklin, Virginia, hoping to make a change in his community.
    
"As a police officer you're wired differently," Terrance told CBN News. "Most people, when they hear gunshots, they're running away from where the shots are coming from. As a police officer, you are trained to go to where those shots are going."

Franklin's police chief still remembers Terrance for that "little something extra" he brought to the job.

"We come into this business with the thought that we are going to change the world and do good things," Chief Philip Hardison said. "In the five years Terrance was with us, he did good things, and he changed at least the impressions of many people in this community in a favorable sense as to how police officers in this city are viewed and trusted."

Resurrecting an Old Dream

Terrance's faith fueled his work ethic, but it also triggered a change.
      
"So you're comfortable, you're serving the force, you're doing what many would consider an honorable career, and to be a man of color doing it too is also honorable," CBN News reporter Efrem Graham said. "What's happened? Is there a wrestling inside you? What's going on?"

"Growing up I always wanted to be a musician," Terrance responded. "Music was always something that was just very important to me, running through my family. My family is basically a family of musicians and ministers. I wanted to also be a musician."
    
"I remember plenty of times working on the night shift of having thoughts and visions—what if, what if I pursued music?" he recounted. "What if I gave it a shot? I wonder what could happen. I would always have that in the back of my mind, but reality would set in: This is what I'm doing now."

Terrance convinced himself law enforcement was the right career until an unusual encounter completely changed the direction of his life.

A Life-Changing Encounter
 
"I was actually thinking about a career in music when I was serving subpoenas. One day I was just going door to door, putting subpoenas on the door, and there was an older gentleman who was just watching me from his front porch, rocking back and forth. Just watching me."

The man called out to Terrance.

"He said, 'Young man, come here.' So I came to where he was," Terrance said. "He pulled himself up on the railings, and he looked at me square in my eye and said, 'When you are going to put that badge and gun down and begin your real work, son?'"

In shock, Terrance asked the man to repeat what he said.
    
"Your real work is in the kingdom of God. Your real work is in ministry, and it's only so far you can go wearing that badge and gun," Terrance said to CBN News as he recounted the man's words. "It's time to put it down and begin your real work."

A Leap of Faith

Terrance has never seen the man again.

"I knew it was of God," the songwriter said. "I made the decision right then to take that leap of faith and to jump."
   
That leap has propelled Terrance into a successful music career, and in 2014, he launched Revival Music company.

But it is more than just a label. Terrance said it's a movement to bring unity and healing to diverse communities.
   
"My joy in today's session is bringing in people together," he said after a live recording in May. "Bringing in different backgrounds, different races coming together ... united in one goal, and that's to worship and to show love to one another."
 
The recording includes CBN's own Joseph Stallings and Sharon Jackson.
  
"I've been in a lot of groups, played a lot of music and sang a lot of songs, but what's different about revival worship is that it's not about the song. It's really not about the music when it comes down to it—it's about the relationship between people," Joseph said.

Sharon said that she is drawn to being a part of this record label.
 
"Each person is important," she said. "And the other thing that I love is that each person is so different. I think that says a lot in our culture when we're from different churches, when we're from different ethnic backgrounds, when we're from different denominations, and different places ... and we are able to come together and make this really cool music together."

It's a sound that Terrance says always carries a special message.

His new song, "Untainted Love," is no different.
  
"This love He has for us is untainted. It's not tainted by the failed expectation of 'I fell short of His glory today. I didn't quite measure up as a Christian to where I should have been,'" Terrance explained. "But His love goes beyond that. It transcends all of that."

It's powerful message that Terrance hopes will transform lives, heal communities and bridge the divide.

Copyright The Christian Broadcasting Network, Inc., All rights reserved.


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