Teen Challenge International is celebrating its 50th year of life-changing ministry.
We are glad to be a part of this great organization. Here is our
history.
Teen Challenge started in Brooklyn, New York in 1958 by Rev. David
Wilkerson.
Wilkerson was a young country preacher pastoring a church in
eastern Pennsylvania. One February afternoon, Wilkerson read
an article in
LIFE magazine about seven teenagers who were on trial for murder.
During a gang fight in Manhattan, these teens beat a young
man to death. Troubled by what he read in the article, and
sensing
God wanted
him to do something for the teens, Wilkerson made a trip
from his hometown in Philipsburg, Pennsylvania to the urban area
of New York
City.
Some time after this, Rev. Wilkerson resigned his church
in Pennsylvania and moved to the New York City area to
work full
time with teenage
gang members. This new work was eventually called “Teen
Challenge.” Soon, Teen Challenge began to also offer help to those
addicted
to drugs and alcohol..
As of January 2002, at the beginning the 45th year, there
were 178 Teen Challenge programs in the United States
and another
150 in other
countries around the world. A study completed by NIDA
in 1974 claimed an 86% success rate 7 years after graduation.
Other
studies have
been completed since that time that confirmed those findings.
The rest of the story of Teen Challenge is told in the
best-selling book, The Cross and the Switchblade. This
book has sold tens
of millions of copies and has been translated into
35 different languages. Another
exciting book that is available, Run Baby Run tells
of notorious gang member Nicky Cruz who was one of David
Wilkerson’ s
early converts in New York City. Beyond the Cross and
the Switchblade
and The Cross
is Still Mightier than the Switchblade also detail
important early history of Teen Challenge.
Teen Challenge has grown into one of the largest and
most successful programs of its kind in the world. |