Overdoses versus deaths related to drugs

 By Leiv Holstad

According to Norwegian statistics on deaths related to drugs, more than 4000 young people died from overdoses on drugs between 1980 and 2008. When I produced the first Marita movie back in 1983/84, I focused on overdoses. In one of the movie scenes we fixed a drug addict’s funeral.

The coffin was lowered into the grave, and the song “Farewell Marita” could be heard while death notices with first name and age on many of my personal friends who died from overdoses were shown. To be sure that we had the right information I contacted the Police and was given access and permission to see the files on persons who at that time had became part of this tragic statistics.

That was a sad experience. I found the names of many I already recognized and knew about, but also names on more friends I still did not know had died. Among them I also found the name of the latest girlfriend I had when I was still on drugs.

When I came to my senses I asked the policeman: Are these all?

Yes, he answered. But I did not find “Jazzen” (The jazzy one) there? Well, I do not think he died from an overdose? The policeman said. No, he died from liver failure, I replied, but his liver was damaged by drug abuse. Neither did I find his wife, Sissel. She had been shot in a drug clash. Nils was not there either; the bus ran him down after taking some LSD. “Krølle” (The curly one) hanged himself in Oslo Prison when he was on a bad comedown. None of them died from overdoses, but they died due to other reasons, the policeman said. Therefore they are part of other statistics.

So what is my conclusion after all this? The deaths due to drugs are more than the statistics tell us. To even think about this could make us all lose courage, but actually we are quite many who survived! Through the effort of Marita Foundation and similar organizations, many have been helped out of a heavy drug abuse. In our web news you can find some stories concerning this.

In this way we have made this tragic statistics look a little less than it would appear otherwise. Thank you to all who join us in this battle!

 

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A Man of Unlimited Faith

In an e-mail I (Leiv) recieved today, Tom Bremer, the leader of Teen Challenge Europe, wrote the following:

The funeral is today in Texas – as I understand it, it is more private for family and very close friends.
There will be a memorial service at Times Square Church on Saturday, May 14.  They are expecting thousands to attend. If you want to go, you can get all of the information at the Times Square Church website: http://www.tscnyc.org
The service will also be available live on video stream from that website. David Wilkerson's brother Don say that the family are at peace, but he request prayers for the family. -Tom Bremer

MONDAY, MAY 2, 2011
Friend to the outcast and hurting.  Fearless witness of Christ’s saving power.  Passionate voice for God to his church.  Tender supporter of widows,orphans and the poor.  And spiritual father to generation upon generation—from the destitute to the powerful, from adults to teenagers, from loved ones to strangers from every walk of life.

 

These traits only begin to define the life of David Wilkerson.  For over six decades he served the Lord faithfully in ministry, founding and leading outreaches that have grown internationally with each decade.  Behind it all has been an unwavering belief in God’s love for every human being and His relentless desire to reach them.

“Brother Dave,” as he liked to be called, was known literally to millions for his unlimited faith.  He believed God could change the lives of gang members and transform the most desperate drug addicts—and the Lord did.  He believed a dynamic church could be launched in the heart of Times Square, New York City—and God brought it to pass.  He believed he could be a man who loved his wife and children well—and he did.

David Ray Wilkerson was born May 19, 1931, in Hammond, Indiana, to a line of devoted Pentecostal preachers.  After he was ordained in the Assemblies of God, he married the love of his life—Gwendolyn Carosso, who would serve beside him in ministry for 57 years.

From the very beginning Brother Dave applied a creative, innovative spirit to ministry.  Yet he preached from anguish and pain, believing God works through our weakness.  He knew that God confounds the wisdom of the world to reveal Himself—and that truth was proved again and again by the ministries Brother Dave founded.

In 1958 he traveled from his small church in Phillipsburg, Pennsylvania, to reach out to gang members on trial in New York City.  “He had never been to New York—he had certainly never met a gang member or a drug addict,” according to his brother, Don Wilkerson.  “He just came here, with his simplicity, his naiveté, whatever you want to call it, and he changed people’s lives.”

As Brother Dave’s friend McCandlish Phillips, the New York Times reporter, wrote, “His method was an absolute model of simplicity, directness and total non-sophistication—he just went out on the streets and mixed with the kids and reasoned with them face-to-face, often quoting the Bible—and it worked.”

Out of that bold move was born the Teen Challenge ministry, a Christ-centered drug and alcohol rehabilitation program.  The ministry became well known though the book The Cross and the Switchblade, which has sold over 50 million copies and been translated into 30 languages.  The ministry has grown to more than 1,000 centers in the United States and 80 other countries.

The Lord then stirred Brother Dave to found Youth Crusades, his evangelistic ministry to young people.  An entire generation became inspired that their lives mattered greatly to God.  Brother Dave also wrote prolifically, his books moving generations of readers toward a life of holy devotion in Christ.  The dozens of books he produced were filled with powerful insight, clarity and conviction.  And he lived out the Christ-like example he wrote of, speaking continually of his own weaknesses and Christ’s faithfulness to him.

Like his namesake, King David of old, Brother Dave served God’s purposes in his generation.  He preached with uncompromising passion and relentless grace. He was not one for fanfare, acclaim or ceremony.  He turned down invitations to meet with world leaders, yet he would give everything he owned to support a poor orphan or a widow in distress.

His last mission on earth was to be an advocate for the poorest of the poor—to provide relief and support for hungry children, widows and orphans, in the U.S. and in impoverished countries.  The outreach he founded to do this, Please Pass the Bread, ministers to thousands of children daily through 56 outreaches in 8 countries.

 

He ran his race well, and when he was finished he was called home by his Lord.  David Wilkerson touched the lives of multiplied millions, and the God-inspired works he founded now outlive him.  The impact of his life is immeasurable—not only in his preaching, writing and founding of world-changing ministries, but in his love, devotion, compassion and ability to stir our faith for greater works.

David’s son Gary offers this word to all who knew and loved his dad: “I know if my father were able to encourage you with his words today, he would invite you to give your all to Jesus, to love God deeply and to give yourself away to the needs of others.”

Brother Dave’s final blog posting, titled “When All Means Fail,” is a fitting word of departure to all whose lives he touched: “Beloved, God has never failed to act but in goodness and love.  When all means fail, His love prevails.  Hold fast to your faith.  Stand fast in His Word.  There is no other hope in this world.”

David Wilkerson’s passing is deep personal loss for many.  Yet we rejoice knowing he lived life to the very fullest, in obedient devotion to God and with a radical love for Jesus.

He is survived by his wife, Gwen Wilkerson; daughter Debi Jonker, her husband, Roger, sons Brent and Matthew and Matthew’s wife, Christina, and children Eva and Grant; daughter Bonnie Hayslip, her husband, Roger, sons David and Brandon and Brandon’s wife, Christina; son Gary Wilkerson, his wife, Kelly, and children, Ashley, Elliot, Evan and Annie; son Greg Wilkerson, his wife, Teresa, and their children, Alyssa and Ryan; brothers Don Wilkerson and Jerry Wilkerson and sister Ruth Harris.  His grandsons serve as his pallbearers.

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These devotionals will continue as there are many journals and unpublished materials written by David Wilkerson from which we will glean. In the meantime we will continue to post some of his previously published devotionals.

Read this devotion online: http://www.worldchallenge.org/en/node/13196