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About the Book
"A Living Sacrifice" by Watchman Nee explores the concept of surrendering one's life completely to God in order to experience true spiritual transformation and fulfillment. Nee emphasizes the importance of yielding to God's will and allowing Him to work through us for His glory. Through practical examples and insights, the book encourages readers to live sacrificially and passionately for God.
David Wilkerson
BEGINNINGS
Christian evangelist, David Ray Wilkerson was born May 19 1931 in Hammond, Indiana. He was born into a family of Pentecostal Christian preachers; both his father and paternal grandfather were ministers.
David was baptized with the Holy Spirit at the age of thirteen and began to preach when he was fourteen. After high school he entered the Central Bible College (affiliated with the Assemblies of God) in Springfield, Missouri. In 1952 he was ordained as a minister.
CALLED BY THE HOLY SPIRIT, MOVED WITH COMPASSION
Wilkerson married his wife, Gwen in 1953 and served as a pastor in small churches in Scottdale and Philipsburg, Pennsylvania, during the early years of their marriage.
But his life changed drastically in 1958 when he was brought to tears after looking at a pen drawing of seven New York City teenagers in Life Magazine. The article detailed the court trial of these young boys, charged with murder.
Cross and the Switchblade
The boys were members of a teenage gang called the Dragons who were accused of brutally attacking and killing Michael Farmer, a fifteen-year-old who had polio.
Two days later, after hearing a clear call from the Holy Spirit telling him âGo to New York City and help those boysâ, Wilkerson arrived at the courthouse in New York City. His plan was to ask the judge for permission to talk to the boys to share Godâs love with them.
The judge refused his request and Wilkerson was removed from the courtroom. He returned home, but his quiet country life was about to change â forever.
NICKY CRUZ: âJESUS LOVES YOU, NICKYâ
Wilkerson returned to New York one day each week, driving over 350 miles from his home in Pennsylvania. He sought Godâs direction while walking the streets, preaching, and meeting with gang members and drug addicts.
David soon met Nicky Cruz, warlord of Brooklyn gang â the Mau Maus â the most violent teenage gang in New York. Nicky threatened to kill Wilkerson the first day the two met. David responded to Nickyâs threats by telling him, âGod has the power to change your life.â Nicky cursed, hit Wilkerson, spit in his face, and told him, âI donât believe in what you say and you get out of here.â
Wilkerson replied, âYou could cut me up into a 1000 pieces and lay them in the street. Every piece will still love you.â For two weeks Nicky couldnât stop thinking about David Wilkersonâs words of love â âI love you, Nicky.â
THE POWER OF JESUSâ LOVE
In July 1958, soon after Wilkersonâs confrontation with Nicky Cruz, Wilkerson scheduled an evangelistic rally for New York gangs, at the St. Nicholas Boxing Arena. Nearly every member of Nickyâs gang, as well as their rival gangs, attended the rally.
The atmosphere was tense until Wilkerson prayed and the power of the Holy Spirit fell. When he gave an altar call, Nicky and most of his gang surrendered their lives to Jesus.
âDavid Wilkerson came with a message of hope and love,â Cruz said. âI felt the power of Jesus like a rushing wind that took my breath away. I fell on my knees and confessed Christ.â
After his conversion, Nicky went to a Bible College in La Puente, CA, where he met his future wife, Gloria. After graduation he became an evangelist, returned to Brooklyn, NY, and led more of the Mau Maus to Christ. He founded Nicky Cruz Outreach and began traveling around the world ministering to hundreds of thousands each year.
In a 1998 article, the Wall Street Journal proclaimed Nicky as the âBilly Graham of the streets.â
A MINISTRY IS BORN: TEEN CHALLENGE
Although David Wilkerson never met with the seven teenage gang members that first drew him to New York City, he founded Teen-Age Evangelism (later called Adult & Teen Challenge) from his heart cry to reach gang members with Godâs love. The first Center in Brooklyn, NY, opened in 1960.
Adult & Teen Challenge is a faith-based, addiction recovery program that teaches Biblical principles as part of a daily program that ministers healing to teenagers, adults, and families. It is affiliated with the Assemblies of God.
Teen Challenge offers a wide range of programs: one to two-year residential recovery programs, re-entry programs to help graduates transition back into independent living, non-residential Community Groups run by seasoned leaders, and prevention programs to educate school-aged students about the destructive consequences of substance abuse.
Teen Challenge students are taught to reject old identities such as, âaddictâ, âfailureâ, âhopelessâ, and see themselves as new creations in Christ â changed from the inside out.
Teen Challenge stands alone as the most effective substance abuse recovery program to date. The success of this ministry is attributed to its foundation in Biblical principles, prayer for conversion, and baptism with the Holy Spirit.
THE PROVEN CURE FOR THE DRUG EPIDEMIC
David Wilkersonâs lifeâs work still stands as a testament to the power of the indwelling Holy Spirit to bring miraculous healing and new life in Christ, to all. Even to drug-addicted, violent young gang members full of hate and sin.
Compared to Short-Term Inpatient (STI) drug treatment programs and Narcotics/Alcoholics Anonymous, Teen Challenge graduates have higher abstinence rates, less frequent relapses, significantly higher full-time employment rates, and are much less likely to return to treatment.
âOnce an addict, always an addictâ is not taught, nor proclaimed at Teen Challenge. Transformed graduates of the program do not need on-going, daily meetings such as Narcotics Anonymous (NA) or Alcoholics Anonymous (AA).
YOU SHALL RECEIVE POWERâŚ
Wilkerson attributed Teen Challengeâs unequaled success rate to the power of the Holy Spirit. âThe Holy Spirit is in charge. As long as He remains in charge, the program will thrive. The minute we try to do things by our own power we will fail.â
No matter how many years addicted, again and again, the testimony of Teen Challenge students remains the same. They are introduced to the love of God when they are born again, but complete victory/deliverance from addiction doesnât come until baptism in the Holy Spirit.
One student said, âI wasnât lonely anymore. I didnât want any more drugs. I loved everybody. For the first time in my life, I felt clean.â
Many graduates of Teen Challenge are so completely transformed they decide to go to seminary, then into ministry. Many return to Teen Challenge as staff members to help others overcome their addictions and find new life.
TESTIMONIES OF TEEN CHALLENGE
Harry Davis â âI discovered Teen Challenge in 1989 at age 63. I did every drug in the world for 50 years. Iâm 71 now and I work in the kitchen at the Brooklyn Center.â
Canzada Edmonds â âLove is what made the difference for me. When I was ready to give up, they showed me, love. They showed me compassion. They showed me through Christ I could live a victorious life. Then they taught me how to be a lady.â
Steve Hill â âIts greatest impact was in the area of discipline and structure. If it wasnât for Teen Challenge, I would either be dead or in the penitentiary.â
EXPANDING GODâS KINGDOM
Wilkerson went on to found Youth Crusades (1967), CURE Corps, and World Challenge (1971) to propel the Gospel worldwide.
In 1986, Wilkersonâs heart was again broken for the lost. As he walked down 42nd Street, he saw prostitutes, young children (under the age of 12) high on crack cocaine, runaways, and drug addicts. He cried and prayed, âGod Youâve got to do something.â Wilkersonâs answer came quickly. In the next hour, the Holy Spirit spoke â âWell, you know the city. Youâve been here. You do it.ââ
Wilkerson was obedient and Times Square Church opened its doors in October 1987.
For nine years, from 1999 to 2008, Wilkerson traveled around the world preaching at conferences encouraging Christian ministers and their families, to ârenew their passion for Christ.â He challenged them to ask, âWhat would happen, Lord, if I âŚ?â
A LEGACY OF FAITH
For over forty years, David Wilkersonâs evangelical ministry included preaching, teaching, and writing. He authored over 30 books including, The Cross and the Switchblade (which became a Hollywood film in 1970), Revival on Broadway, It Is Finished, Hungry for More of Jesus, Have You Felt Like Giving Up Lately?, and The Vision.
Wilkerson always challenged his church to commit to obey Jesusâ teachings. He preached Christian beliefs of Godâs holiness, righteousness, and love, and delivered powerful messages to encourage righteous living and total dependence on God.
He would say, âholiness may seem to be an antiquated term by our standards, but not by Godâs. Followers of Christ are still called to be holy, as God is holyâ (1 Pet. 1:16).
Wilkerson never lost his heartache over the devastating effects rampant sin wreaks on a life, home, and family. He preached many fiery sermons about sin; having seen and experienced firsthand, countless lives ravaged by the evils of violence and addiction.
ABSENT FROM THE BODY, PRESENT WITH THE LORD
On April 27, 2011, while driving in Texas, Wilkerson collided head-on with a tractor-trailer. He was pronounced dead at the scene. His wife Gwen was injured but survived.
Wilkerson and his wife had four children (two sons who are ministers, and two daughters who are married to ministers) and eleven grandchildren.
FINAL WORDS FROM NICKY CRUZ
âHe can take a bullet, he can be killed, but he stood because [he was] obedient to Jesus. Jesus sent him there to bring the message to the gangs. I almost killed him then because I really was totally full of hate. That was when he told me that Jesus loved me. Wilkerson never lost his heart for the worldâs needy people.â
âDavid reminded me of Jesus,â Cruz said. âTwo precious things that fascinate me about Christ â He had active eyes, and always was there looking at the needs of the people. Dave had this heart of compassion just like Jesus.â
A Great Marriage-Wrecking Lie
I met my aunt Margaret for the first time when I was ten. She was in a wheelchair in the middle of the front room, drooling uncontrollably, unaware of my presence, incontinent, and unable to take care of herself. And yet my uncle Gale cared for her, and he did so tenderly. They were high school sweethearts, but now she was dying of brain cancer after only fifteen years together. My uncle didnât abandon her. He didnât get a mistress. No, he had publicly vowed, âin sickness and in health, till death do us partâ â and he was faithful to his word. A few years later, she died. This is a biblical picture of marriage: joy through servanthood, faithfulness, and self-denial. But times have changed. Our societal expectations for marriage have gone through a radical transformation, and those changes have affected many in the church. Changing Expectations One commentator describes the transformation this way: âThe old attitude was that one must work for the marriage. The new attitude is that the marriage had better work for meâ (Jonah Goldberg, Suicide of the West, 267). My uncle worked for his marriage. He was willing to forgo short-term pleasure for the sake of his wife, his children, and the glory of God. He believed that keeping his marriage vows would enhance his joy in this life and in the world to come. But those who expect marriage to âwork for meâ often assume that âGod just wants me to be happyâ in the thin and predictable ways. Their focus is on me and my immediate needs. They will most likely bail when any significant, protracted marital trouble comes. Here is how University of Virginia sociologist W. Bradford Wilcox sums up our new marital expectations: Prior to the late 1960s, Americans were more likely to look at marriage and family through the prisms of duty, obligation, and sacrifice. . . . But the psychological revolutionâs focus on individual fulfillment and personal growth changed all that. Increasingly, marriage was seen as a vehicle for a self-oriented ethic of romance, intimacy, and fulfillment. In this new psychological approach to married life, oneâs primary obligation was not to oneâs family but to oneself; hence, marital success was defined not by successfully meeting obligations to oneâs spouse and children but by a strong sense of subjective happiness in marriage â usually to be found in and through an intense, emotional relationship with oneâs spouse. The 1970s marked the period when, for many Americans, a more institutional model of marriage gave way to the âsoul-mate modelâ of marriage. Professor Wilcoxâs âsoul-mate modelâ is a fruit of expressive individualism. The assumptions behind this model are a moral solvent, dissolving the covenant bond of marriage. At its center is a potent, marriage-wrecking lie: God just wants me to be happy â and that is âhappinessâ as I choose to define it. Couples have used this lie to justify abortion, divorce, adultery, abandonment, and all kinds of selfishness. âGod wants couples to pursue a greater long-term marital happiness through Christlike self-denial.â The problem with this lie is that it twists an important truth. God does want us to be happy, but he defines the terms, and immediate happiness is not Godâs primary goal. God wants couples to pursue a greater long-term marital happiness through Christlike self-denial. God expects us to deny self â to defer immediate marital gratification â in order to experience greater long-term happiness. There are times in marriage when such self-denial takes great faith. Beneath the Lie This lie is a deeply rooted cultural assumption, and assumptions can be difficult to address because they are often subconscious. They seep into us through television, movies, literature, media, music, and our educational system. For instance, one way they rise to the surface and become visible is through consumer advertising. Ad agencies get paid to identify the assumptions that motivate us. Here are some examples â each, if internalized a certain way, could be devastating to a marriage: Outback Steakhouse invites us to eat at their restaurants because there are âNo rules. Just right.â McDonalds tells us to buy French fries because âYou deserve a break today.â Reebok urges us to buy their running shoes âBecause youâre worth it.â And Nike, throwing all restraint to the wind, urges us to âJust do it!â The assumptions expressed by the mind of Christ, however, are strikingly different. Do we âdeserve a break todayâ? Are we really âworth itâ? And above all, should we give into sinful passion and âjust do itâ? No, we live by a deeper logic that counters the selfishness and presumption of the world around us: the logic of the cross. We deserved eternal death, but Christ humbled himself and died so that we might experience the full and abundant life. âJesus found joy through self-denial, and so will husbands and wives.â The deepest marital happiness comes through self-denial, humility, unselfishness, patience, kindness, and the crucifixion of our me mentality. Ultimately, the wise Christian couple pursuing a happy, God-glorifying union will model their marriage on Christ and him crucified. Jesus found joy through self-denial (Hebrews 12:2), and so will husbands and wives. Deny Yourself for Her Again and again, Scripture gives us glimpses into the mind of Christ. After predicting his death and resurrection, Jesus turns to his disciples and says, If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me. For whoever would save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake will find it. (Matthew 16:24â25) âTake up a cross? Are you kidding?â The cross was an instrument of torture, death, suffering, and shame. But Jesus urges us to save our lives by doing just that â taking up our cross. We save our marriages through denying ourselves â making our spouseâs happiness as important as our own. We apply the principle of the cross. We do this with the conviction that happiness deferred in patient obedience to God is much greater than happiness immediately gratified. Whoever would be great among you must be your servant, and whoever would be first among you must be your slave, even as the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many. (Matthew 20:26â28) Happy, fruitful marriages do not think mainly in terms of rights. They think from the mind of Christ. Jesus died to his rights to give us ours before God. Husbands and wives who follow him do the same. Do nothing from selfishness or vain conceit, but in humility consider others more significant [or important] than yourself. (Philippians 2:3) The closest âotherâ in your life is your spouse â the person that sleeps with you, eats with you, worships with you, and raises your children with you. Applying this principle gets really practical. The Lieâs Fruit As the lie proliferates in North America and beyond, the fruits are painfully obvious. Self-denial is an indispensable part of the glue that makes the marital covenant work. Without a willingness to deny self, people are less willing to marry, or they donât stay married. In 1970, about 70 percent of Americans over age 18 were married. Today, for the first time in U.S. history, that number is 50 percent and falling. âMarriage isnât changing,â notes sociologist Mark Regnerus. âItâs receding. In an era of increasing options, technology, gender equality, âcheapâ sex, and secularization, fewer people â including fewer practicing Christians â actually want what marriage is. Thatâs the bottom line.â Collapsing marriage also means collapsing fertility. We are not producing enough children to replace ourselves. Were it not for immigration, the population in North America would be shrinking. Thankfully, fertility rates in the evangelical church are better than the national average. Rejecting the Lie What can we do to reject the lie? We can start with the assumption that we donât deserve to be happy. As we have already noted, the cross shows each of us what we deserve â death, and that is the bottom line. Therefore, no matter how bad our marital circumstances, we are always getting better than we deserve. Those who believe this can continually thank God for his kindness, in spite of their marital problems. We can also reject the lie by believing that holy people are happy people, and marriage is one of Godâs primary tools to produce personal holiness. âTo be holy as he is holy,â notes Bruce Milne, âis the prescription for true and endless happiness. To be holy is to be happy . . . there is no joy like that of holinessâ (The Message of Heaven and Hell, 52). I have found it helpful to think of marriage as a spiritual gymnasium in which I strengthen personal holiness. Marriage toughens the muscle of forgiveness. It strengthens the willingness to love an enemy. It enhances the ability to humble myself and receive criticism. Marriage also teaches the crucial words, âIâm sorry. Would you please forgive me?â In the marital gym, I also strengthen the crucial muscle of perseverance. Most marriages face a moment when the couple would like to call it quits but, if they persevere, almost always later admit that would have been a mistake. Focus on the Family once did a study of couples who persevered through the desire to divorce, only to find that five years later, most of those who persevered now described themselves as happy in their marriage. Persevering when the going gets tough requires self-denial, but it often solves many lesser problems. Two Slaves Become One Ambrose Bierce, a nineteenth-century short-story writer, not known for being a Christian, nevertheless summed up marriage with these insightful words: âMarriage is a community consisting of a master, a mistress, and two slaves, making in all, one person.â My insightful wife sums up the mind of Christ in marriage this way: âEvery fruitful, happy marriage begins with two funerals.â This is how the mind of Christ thinks. It thinks like my uncle Gale. Reject the lie that immediate happiness is the goal. Yes, God does want us to be happy, but the deepest, most lasting happiness comes only to those who deny themselves and take up their cross daily. They serve unselfishly, consider their spouse more significant than themselves, persevere through marital troubles, practice forgiveness, and grow in humility. These are the marriages that maximize long-term happiness, and in such a way that God gets the glory. Article by William Farley