Wilkerson was one of mine, along with John the Baptist and a few others. So I
was deeply saddened when my daughter called and said that he had been killed in
a car accident. Of course there was the sweet knowledge that he was with the
Lord, but there was also the bitter reality that we no longer had him here on
earth.
His passing brought back a flood of memories. Back in 1980, I
screened the movie that was based on his best-selling book, Cross and the
Switchblade. It starred Erik Estrada (from the television series CHiPs) as
Nicky Cruz, the hardened gang member who mocked the naive country preacher who
had come to his rough neighborhood.
I loved the way Wilkerson trusted God and went to New York,
gave his shoes to some hoodlum, and ended up walking around the city in his
socks. He epitomized the love that each of us should have for the lost. I
decided there and then that I had to fly David Wilkerson 7,000 miles to
New Zealand for a series of meetings.
New Zealand is about 16 hours ahead of New York, so I climbed
out of bed at 2 a.m. on a Tuesday morning, and put a long-distance call
through to the United States. After about 40 minutes of complications, I finally
got through to the church and was disappointed to hear a busy signal.
The next morning I got up at the same time, and after another
40 or so minutes I was able to contact his personal secretary. I boldly said,
“May I speak to David Wilkerson please?” Any second now and I would be speaking
to the man himself. The voice came back, “Mr. Wilkerson is not available.” I
said, “But I’m calling from New Zealand!” Once again I heard a stern,
“Mr. Wilkerson is not available.” I placed the phone down and felt a little
stupid. David Wilkerson was untouchable.
Fast-forward 13 years to 1993. Sue and I were now living in
the U.S. A few years earlier, a pastor had heard my teaching called “Hell’s Best
Kept Secret,” and had said, “America must hear this message!” and invited us
to base our ministry in Southern California.
A woman had called my office and said that David Wilkerson
had also heard “Hell’s Best Kept Secret” and wanted to speak with me. He would
be calling in a few minutes. When the phone rang, I quickly picked it up, and
sure enough it was that famous voice. He wanted to fly me from Los Angeles to
New York to share the teaching with his church. I could hardly believe my
ears.
A few days later, I was sitting wide-eyed having lunch with
David Wilkerson in New York City. Just me and him. It was almost like having
lunch with John the Baptist. Seriously. I hardly heard a word he said because I
kept thinking: That is David Wilkerson! It’s him. The man. I could reach out
and poke him in the eye. I can’t believe this!
I then preached in his church and had the wonderful
experience of walking with him (with his shoes on) through the streets of New
York, as he gave me a personal tour through his ministry.
When I arrived back in Los Angeles airport I saw Pat Boone at
the baggage claim and cleverly broke the ice by saying: “Hi Pat. I’m Ray
Comfort. Have you heard of David Wilkerson? I just spoke at his church.” It was
then that I remembered that Pat Boone starred as the famous preacher in The
Cross and the Switchblade.
Duh.
A year or so later, I spoke for a pastor in Texas. He kindly
gave me an endorsement for the ministry. It said, “I
have served as a local pastor, Teen Challenge Director, Crusade Director
for David
Wilkerson, and missionary, but never during those years did I encounter an
evangelist with a more life-changing message.”
It
was then that I found out that he was the secretary, who, 14 years earlier had
wrongly told me that David Wilkerson was not available. Sure he was. It
just had to be in God’s timing.
Ray Comfort is an evangelist, author, televsion host and founder of Living Waters ministry.