It was February 28, 1958 when the 26-year-old
Pentecostal preacher from rural Pennsylvania disrupted a highly publicized
murder trial in New York City. David Wilkerson had made the eight-hour drive
from his quiet mountain village to downtown Manhattan for a simple reason: to
speak to the seven accused gang members about their salvation. In a grave
attempt to share the love of God, Wilkerson had rushed to the front of the
courtroom at the close of trial proceedings and pleaded publicly with the judge
for permission to meet the teenage defendants. News media were everywhere, and
Wilkerson unwittingly made himself the source of headline news throughout New
York City. The judge had been receiving death threats during the trial, and
Wilkerson was almost arrested as a presumed assailant. The judge later refused
Wilkerson's request to see the boys and ordered him never to return to his
courtroom.
Today the one-time rural preacher is known as the founder of a international
drug rehabilitation program called Teen Challenge that has one of the highest
success rates anywhere in the world. Since it's first center opened in New York
in 1960, Teen Challenge has grown to over 170 centers in 48 states and nearly
250 centers in 80 countries. In Puerto Rico the organization is building an AIDS
hospital, the first of its kind. Wilkerson also founded a global evangelistic
ministry, World Challenge. Yet the Pentecostal preacher remains today what he
was 40 years ago-a man dedicated to preaching the gospel in the heart of New
York City. He pastors Times Square Church in Manhattan, which he founded in
1987. Wilkerson made more than the news back in 1958-five months after his
discouraging day in court, his compassion for teen-age gangs and drug addicts
make history.
A year later he established the first Teen Challenge center in one of the
roughest areas of Brooklyn. Addicts and other troubled youths poured into the
center and were delivered by God's power. One skeptical psychiatrist observing
the program remarked, "It seems to me you're just using Jesus as a
crutch." "Then give me two of them," a resident of the center
responded. "What is the program?" the psychiatrist asked. "God in
the morning, Jesus in the afternoon and the Holy Ghost at night," the
resident replied. The good news spread quickly, and Wilkerson was deluged with
pleas for help with drug problems from all over the country. "I raised
funds for the first 10-12 centers that started," he said. Answering appeals
got so demanding that he allowed the ministry to come under the Home Missions
department of the Assemblies of God. His brother Don then took over as director
of the center. Based on strong Christian principles, the intensive program runs
from 6 to 14 months. Residents come from the streets, detoxification facilities,
hospitals or jails. Some are referred by pastors and counselors or court-ordered
into treatment by judges. HIV-positive students are normally accepted. Teen
Challenge teaches that the key to abstinence from substance abuse is a personal
relationship with Jesus Christ.