David was up late as
usual at midnight watching the "Late
Show" when he first asked the question:
"What would happen, Lord, if I sold the
TV set and spent that time—praying?"
After David
Wilkerson prayed
that prayer in 1958, the world would
soon find out.
"What would happen, Lord, if I … ?"
After his television was actually sold,
Wilkerson began to devote his midnight
to 2 a.m. hours to prayer. One night
while trying to pray, he found himself
unusually drawn to an issue of Life
magazine sitting on his desk. At first
he suspected his interest in reading to
be merely a human diversion pulling him
away from the discipline of prayer.
Nonetheless he couldn't get away from it
and finally asked, "God is there
something you want me to see?"
Caught by the eyes
The trailblazing
pastor-turned-street-evangelist and
founder of Teen Challenge died
tragically on Wednesday, April 27, at
age 79 in a car accident in Texas. He
leaves his wife, Gwen, who survived the
accident, and several family members,
but he also leaves a church in Times
Square and a drug recovery ministry
(Teen Challenge) that has resulted in
lives changed around the world. His
story was first told in the bestselling
1963 book The Cross and the Switchblade.
What Wilkerson saw in that issue of Life
was destined to change his own life and
that of so many others. He read the
report of a gang on trial in New York.
He recalls the story:
… my attention was caught by the eyes of
one of the figures in the drawing. A
boy. One of seven boys on trial for
murder. The artist had caught such a
look of bewilderment and hatred and
despair in his features that I opened
the magazine wide again to get a closer
look. And as I did, I began to cry.
"What's the matter with me!" I said
aloud, impatiently brushing away a tear.
I looked at the picture more carefully.
The boys were teen-agers. They were
members of a gang called the Dragons.
Beneath their picture was the story of
how they had gone into Highbridge Park
in New York and brutally attacked and
killed a fifteen-year-old polio victim
named Michael Farmer. The seven boys
stabbed Michael in the back seven times
with their knives, then beat him over
the head with garrison belts. They went
away wiping blood through their hair,
saying, "We messed him good."
The story revolted me. It turned my
stomach. In our little mountain town
such things seemed mercifully
unbelievable.
That's why I was dumbfounded by a
thought that sprang suddenly into my
head—full-blown, as though it had come
into me from somewhere else: Go to New
York City and help those boys.
The internal summons
Wilkerson felt in that prayer time soon
led the skinny 26-year-old Pennsylvania
pastor from the mountains of Philipsburg
to the streets of New York, from tending
a local church to advocating for gang
members and drug addicts in a
courthouse. His ministry caught fire
throughout the New York area and around
the world. In the 1960s and '70s it took
form as a Christian addiction recovery
program called Teen Challenge, a network
of social and evangelistic training and
work centers.
The Jesus Factor
The success rate of the Teen Challenge
program and its proven approach to
Christian discipleship emerged amidst
Wilkerson's evangelical and Pentecostal
worldview and theology. Its effect has
been repeatedly researched and
documented, and its results proven to be
quite astounding. It is, in fact,
unparalleled as a recovery program in
its efficacy.
In a 1975 survey by the National
Institute of Drug Abuse, Teen Challenge
was shown as having an 86 percent or
higher success rate of recovery from
drug addiction among its participants.
When Teen Challenge became a political
talking point in 2001, as President
George W. Bush launched his Faith-Based
Initiative, some questioned Teen
Challenge's use of the number (for
example, it doesn't count the 30 percent
or so who start the program but do not
finish). But even so, the remarkably low
recidivism rate provided more
credibility to the program, and the
research ultimately isolated the most
distinctive aspect of the program as
"Jesus" or "God"; thus, it came to be
known as the "Jesus Factor."
Teen Challenge has grown to become the
oldest, largest, and most successful
drug recovery program of its kind, with
over 170 centers in the United States
and 250 worldwide. A vital part of the
program has been prayer for conversion
and often the baptism in the Holy Spirit
(emphasis on this experience subsequent
to conversion is the chief
characteristic of Pentecostalism).
Wilkerson's journey spawned his
bestselling book, The Cross and the
Switchblade, with 15 million copies now
sold worldwide in 30 languages and a
1970 film starring Pat Boone, which a
reported 50 million people have seen.
Christianity Today included the book in
its 2006 list of "The Top 50 Books That
Have Shaped Evangelicals."
A Lasting Impact
But just how has Wilkerson, a
Pentecostal pastor from a small town,
actually "shaped evangelicals" and the
world? In the church in which he served
during his early years as a pastor (the
Assemblies of God), in the Pentecostal
movement, and in the evangelical
movement, Wilkerson's life, message, and
passion have revived the importance of:
Spirit-filled service to humanity.
Wilkerson reminded us that
"Spirit-empowerment" is about serving
hopeless people boldly and
compassionately, not about merely
seeking a self-gratifying emotional
religious experience. Long before
"social action" or "compassionate
ministry" were buzz words or en vogue in
the church, Wilkerson was engaging in it
not out of efforts to be "relevant" but
out of a pure sense of divine call.
Today's renewed emphasis on
compassionate ministry among
Pentecostals and evangelicals owes much
to his example.
A renewed reverence for God. Holiness
may seem to be an antiquated term by our
standards, but not by God's. That's what
Wilkerson would say, over and again.
Followers of Christ are still called to
be holy as God is holy (1 Pet. 1:16).
Teen Challenge helped us see the
connection between biblical holiness and
personal wholeness. Healing took on new
significance through this Pentecostal
leader—the healing of mind and soul.
Wilkerson has been known for his
uncompromising preaching style and call
to holiness for decades. While some have
felt his preaching to be often prophetic
in its emotional honesty and biblical
ethic, others have branded him instead
as irrelevant, behind the times, or old
fashioned. While Wilkerson consistently
preached hard against sin, that is
arguably because he saw firsthand the
toll sin could take on a life. Countless
faces of helpless lives and the cries of
hardened addicts perhaps kindled an
anger of sorts within the late
preacher's soul, anger toward sin and
the enemy of our souls that sounded as a
poignant cry within his preaching.
Acknowledging the signs of the times.
Wilkerson consistently saw and believed
that the judgment of God is inevitable
and that Christians should be concerned,
repentant, and prayerful. When dubbed a
prophet by others, Wilkerson would often
quote Amos, "I'm not a prophet, neither
the son of a prophet." His writings,
however, would beg to differ. In 1974,
he published a small book filled with
earth-shaking predictions and
unapologetically titled The Vision. This
book swept the charismatic and
Pentecostal world with great interest in
his descriptions of an ever-increasing
darkness that would soon fill the
culture. Many were challenged by the
apocalyptic images, while many others
thought it too much "gloom and doom."
While reflecting on his life today, I
gave this older book a fresh read. As I
did so, it soon became clear that much
of what he predicted at that time has in
fact already come true (some even in the
last two years), including:
There is a worldwide economic confusion
just ahead. … It is not really a
depression I see coming—but a recession
of such magnitude that it will affect
the lifestyle of nearly every wage
earner in America and around the world.
… A false economic boom will precede the
recession—but it will be shortlived. …
We are going to witness the bankruptcies
of some of this nation's major and most
popular corporations. … The auto
industry is going to be hurt badly. …
The world's greatest economists will be
at a loss to explain the confusion.
As with most impassioned souls and
preachers, there is a need to divide
between divine insight and personal
opinion, between wheat and chaff. Never,
however, have Wilkerson's forecasts
seemed to me to be either insincere or
in any way self-serving. On the
contrary, they have consistently come
across more as warnings than as efforts
at sensationalism. And, honestly, what
concerns me at this point is not what
Wilkerson predicted in his writings, but
more so the predictions he made that
have not yet come true. (For instance,
The Vision predicts an unprecedentedly
large earthquake in the United States
that would be preceded by "another
earthquake, possibly in Japan.") While
some in the evangelical movement may
take issue with these types of writings,
Pentecostalism has carried a history of
holding strongly to the inerrancy of the
Bible as "THE Word of God" while also
praying for and responding to "a word
from God" for the moment, as long as it
does not contradict Scripture. Wilkerson
brought warnings and the hope of Christ
not only to drug addicts, but also to
the church. He implored us to read "the
signs of the times."
Back to the pastorate
In 1986, by all signs Wilkerson was
ready for retirement. But, while walking
down 42nd Street in New York City, once
again during his midnight hour of
prayer, he said that he felt God calling
him back to the city to plant a church
there. He found the fresh sense of call
irresistible. By October of the next
year he made his second move to New
York, this time into a rented
auditorium. The preacher whom some said
was "old school" or "behind the times"
actually planted a church in Times
Square itself! Within two years, Times
Square Church purchased the historic
Mark Hellinger Theater, and now counts
some 8,000 regular worshippers.
Until his untimely death this week,
Wilkerson's focus in more recent years
has been investing in the lives of
pastors and their families with the goal
of "renewing their passion for Christ,"
challenging them to ask, as he did,
"What would happen, Lord, if I … ?"
