My family is praising God! Both my mother and father contracted COVID-19 but have since recovered. My father was hospitalized with the virus, and there were some scary moments for my family. We didn’t know if he would recover.

 I have hesitated to write anything because I realize for many families, they have not had this positive outcome. Some are dealing with the loss of loved ones because of this deadly virus. My heart goes out to them. My prayer is that they would feel the comfort and peace of our Heavenly Father.

But what I share here is to emphasize hope and the power of prayer.

After my father’s recovery, a Christian writer from Sweden contacted me to do a story. David Spaanberger was gracious enough to translate his article in English so I could share it here.

Some details might be lost through translation, but the one thing I want to emphasize in David’s article is that in times of crisis—worldwide crisis—we can’t forget about the importance of the global body of Christ.

In his years of ministry with Teen Challenge, my father traveled all around the world. He gave up so much of his time away from his wife and family to share the gospel of Jesus Christ and help establish the ministry of Teen Challenge.

But that sacrifice came back to us as the global body of Christian believers prayed for his healing. We are grateful!

While many of us around the world cannot meet in our churches and feel physically disconnected from our congregations, let’s remember the power of prayer. And in healing or death, our hope is in Jesus Christ.  

 

 

David Wilkerson’s brother received intercession ​– ​survived corona
American preacher Don Wilkerson, brother of world famous David Wilkerson, became fatally ill from the coronavirus, but recovered fast when receiving intercession and anti-malarial medication. – ​God used various ways and means to bring about my healing, says Wilkerson to The World Today.

Now 80-year-old preacher Donald “Don” Wilkerson is the younger brother of the even more well-known but departed preacher David Wilkerson. Together the brothers established the Christian organisation Teen Challenge, that works with drug rehabilitation, evangelisation and discipling, and today is present in over 90 countries, including Sweden.

Don Wilkerson’s daughter Jule Klose has written a book about the beginnings of Teen Challenge and it is through contact with her that The World Today is able to tell about how Don Wilkerson got fatally ill from the coronavirus.

Julie Klose describes​ how both her 80-year-old dad and her 81-year-old mum started having cold symptoms on 21 March, which was about a week after her dad Don had been away on a board meeting for said Teen Challenge in New York, to where he went by train from northern Virginia.

After a few days of having symptoms, the couple seemed to be feeling better, but after another day or two their symptoms got worse and Julie was getting concerned. – ​On Sunday 29 March I got a phone call from my mum about my dad having difficulties moving his legs, she recounts.

Don Wilkerson had​ to go to the emergency room, where it turned out he had a temperature of over 39 degrees Celsius. A COVID-19 test was taken, and he received treatment for dehydration, but as otherwise both his lungs and blood work looked good, he got to go home again the same day.

On Monday morning he was feeling better, but in the evening he again had a high fever and also chills and an intensive soreness in his body. – He could barely eat or drink, and my mum was struggling to care of him. She also had the virus, but her symptoms were not as extreme, the daughter describes.

On Tuesday morning​ Don was feeling a bit better again, but then came another fever pitch. Fever reducing drugs did not help. The same day the family was also notified that Don had been tested positive for COVID-19.

On Wednesday morning the situation got even more critical. – My mum said my dad was incoherent and was barely responding to her questions. She could not get him to eat or drink, Julie recounts.

Again Don Wilkerson​ had to go to the emergency room, where it was now established that he had contracted pneumonia. The doctor then introduced a combination treatment of antibiotics and anti-malarial medication hydroxichloroquine. The latter has created controversy, as president Trump has recommended the medication even though it can cause serious side effects and experts argue that evidence to recommend it against the coronavirus is missing.

A request for​ intercession for Don Wilkerson was also spread to Christians around the world, through Teen Challenge and other organisations.

Julie Klose describes for The World Today how she was aware of her dad already having been used by God for 65 years, and that she had to trust in God’s goodness even if it were to be that time had come for her dad to die. At the same time she dearly wished this would not be the case. – On Wednesday night, while my dad was in the hospital, I had a moment of going into my bedroom and crying out to God: “Please God, don’t take my dad. I am not ready for you to take him”, she recounts.

On Thursday Don​ Wilkerson woke up at hospital and was already feeling considerably better. He was confirmed free of fever the same day, and two days later, on 3 April, he could go home. – Obviously God has more for my dad to do on earth to spread the good news of Jesus Christ, to help those with addiction to find freedom, and I am rejoicing in that today. My whole family is rejoicing in that today, Julie Klose concludes happily.

She describes how both her parents are now recovering well and have regained their appetite, which they both lost while being ill. – My dad is slowly getting stronger and even enjoying his favourite chocolates. He said: “When I could taste chocolate, I knew I was getting better”, she recounts.

When Julie Klose asks a question from The World Today to her dad, about how he has experienced God’s hand in what he has gone through, Don Wilkerson replies that the word “international”, that previously often felt like hype to him, has taken on an entirely new meaning for him. – People all around the world were sending me messages and prayers while I was in the hospital. You realize the impact of the global body of Christ when something like this happens, he says.

To the Christians of Sweden, Don Wilkerson wants to give a double message. The first one is about how he escaped death. – God used various ways and means and the tools available, even those drugs in treatment, to bring about my healing. I believe the timing to get to the hospital when I did was instrumental in my recovery, he says.

Then he gets back to the significance of the body of Christ at this moment in time. – Don’t forget how important the body of Christ – the international body – is during this crisis. No matter where we live or how we are affected by this, if we are followers of Jesus Christ, our hope is in him, says Don Wilkerson.

By David Spånberger david.spanberger@varldenidag.se

I am always amazed at how God plans out our steps even when we don’t understand where He is taking us or why. But when He reveals Himself, we have that light bulb moment, and we see clearly.

Let me explain…

Over three years ago, I was approached by my father, Don Wilkerson, about writing a book about the legacy and founding of Teen Challenge. Immediately, I felt called to write it even though none of it made sense. There were several reasons why I questioned it:

    1. What about the bestselling book, The Cross and the Switchblade that catapulted the ministry? That book has reached millions with its powerful story of my uncle’s calling to New York City and the establishing of the ministry of Teen Challenge. Why would I want to compete or even take away from that in any way?
    2. Was it relevant? Adult and Teen Challenge just celebrated its 60th Anniversary with over 1400 programs in 125 countries. Why go back to the beginning days? God has given each program its unique calling and thousands upon thousands have found freedom from addiction.
    3. Would people think I am writing this book for personal gain? I struggled with even using my maiden name on the cover of the book, which is not my legal name. I have never been a name dropper but how do I tell this story without acknowledging my family connection?
    4. Did I have the knowledge to write about a ministry that I only knew through my upbringing? I grew up in Teen Challenge, but I have never worked in the ministry.
    5. Could I write a book? The fear of accomplishing a task of writing a book was daunting.

 

Even with all my questions, I knew God wanted me to write this story but why?

I cried every time I talked about it. It was as if there was this well of emotion inside of me that I couldn’t explain, but the Holy Spirit kept nudging me—Write It!

Several months after the release of Giving Hope An Address, I still doubted. I received wonderful reviews and comments about the book, but I still questioned the book’s purpose. After struggling through promoting the book, I complained to God, “Why did I devote all that time to write the legacy story of Teen Challenge? What was the purpose?”

I kept coming back to that undeniable Holy Spirit nudge not to question but write. Despite the whispers of doubt and all my fears, I knew God wanted the founding story to be told again.

I now understand why I felt that nudge.

A Story For A New Generation

Recently, there have been decisions made that are compromising the original purpose and mission of Teen Challenge. There is a shift that is veering away from the ministry’s founding.

I am not here to write about the details of those compromises; I am simply sharing why God wanted me to write Giving Hope An Address.

There’s a new generation God is using at Adult and Teen Challenge programs worldwide. They have the same burden—as previous generations— to reach those bound by addiction.

But this new generation needs to understand the beginning days of the ministry to point, once again, to the source of the success of Teen Challenge.

The book is a reminder of what God did through David and Don Wilkerson— and countless others— in establishing Teen Challenge in the heart of New York City.

It’s a reminder of the power of prayer and how prayer brought my uncle to New York City. How prayer established Teen Challenge and how prayer built and sustained thousands of programs worldwide for over 60 years!

The story tells the humble beginnings, the financial struggles, and the way God provided for every need of the ministry.

Giving Hope An Address is a Holy Spirit nudge to a new generation that Teen Challenge was not founded on a man-made method of drug rehabilitation but by the gospel of Jesus Christ.

With over 1400 programs in 125 countries and countless testimonies of those who found freedom from their addictions, God has done the miraculous!

And at the center of that miracle is the saving power of the Cross—the foundation of the ministry of Teen Challenge!

The success of the ministry—to spiritually and physically heal those trapped by addiction— was what David Wilkerson coined as the “Jesus factor.”

There are 60 years of miracle stories of freedom from addiction and the “Jesus factor” is at the center of each one of them.

Don’t compromise God’s calling and purpose for Adult and Teen Challenge. The message of the gospel has to be the driving force of the method in treating addiction. If that is compromised in any way, then it is no longer the Teen Challenge method.

As long as the Cross remains at the center of the continual Cross and Switchblade story, God will keep blessing what He ordained!

Keep the Cross Central!

Know the history of Teen Challenge.

Read The Cross and the Switchblade.

Read Giving Hope An Address.

Be a generation that holds tightly to the founding mission.

Don’t let a ministry drift away from the purpose God miraculously set in place sixty years ago!

 

 

“I am confident of this: He who began a good work in you will be faithful to complete it and more till the day of Jesus Christ.” Philippians 1:6

 

 

 

 

 

Giving Hope An Address is available at these retailers: