Another Special Life in Christ
These testimony lives are not stories of "role models". Jesus is the
role model!
These are lives wonderfully touched & changed by Jesus!
Lee Strobel:
A former atheist, Lee holds a Master of Studies
in Law degree from Yale Law School, was an investigative newspaper reporter, and was the
award-winning legal editor of the Chicago Tribune. Currently, he is a teaching pastor at
Saddleback Valley Community Church in Lake Forest, Calif., and a board member of the Willow
Creek Association.
An all-around religious skeptic born in 1952
(notions of God represent wishful thinking), his wife stunned him in the autumn of 1979 with
the announcement that she had become a Christian. "I rolled my eyes and braced for the worst,
feeling like the victim of a bait-and-switch scam. I had married one Leslie...the fun
Leslie, the carefree Leslie, the risk-taking Leslie...and now I feared she was going to turn
into some sort of sexually repressed prude who would trade our upwardly mobile lifestyle for
all-night prayer vigils and volunteer work in grimy soup kitchens."
At age 28 and after almost two years of intense
investigation of Jesus, he converted on 8 Nov. 1981. He published The Case For Christ in
1998 and The Case For Faith in 2000. I've read both and think that each of these
less-than-300 pages books has excellent information for those who think they will not find
intelligent evidence in favor of faith and Jesus. A great 3:50 minute video from one of the TBN Trinity Broadcasting Network was posted on TBN's Face Book page on 15 Feb. 2015 of Lee giving a summary of his journey from faith-filled atheism into a two year investifgation of the claims of Christianity; EXCELLENT! See his video apologetics (and other stuff)
website HERE.
From the Gegrapha web site (Christian journalists) write-up:
The
Case for Christ by Lee Strobel (apparently an
interview)
I was an atheist for most of my life. I thought
that the idea of an all powerful, all loving God was just silly. I learned in school that
evolution was where life came from, so what do you need God for? And I had a lot of
self-motivation for living an atheistic lifestyle. I was living a very immoral life and a
drunken life, life that was really a hundred percent focused on journalism.
I remember I've loved newspapers since I was a
little kid. My dad used to bring home the Chicago Daily News every night from work, and I
would read it as a little kid and say how is there all this news every day and how does it
always happen to just perfectly fit? I couldn't figure this out. I wanted to be a journalist,
so I started a newspaper when I was 12 years old; and it became quite successful. We had 200
subscribers, and we charged 20 cents a month. It was five pages a week. I printed it in my
basement on a little printing press. I had advertising, three dollars a page, that I would
sell. I made a profit; I did it for two years, and I really enjoyed it. Then I lied about my
age and got a job at a newspaper as a summer intern. And I spent five years as a summer
intern, starting at age fourteen; so I had a lot of experience for a young
kid.
I went to
the University of Missouri because everyone told me that's the first journalism school in the
country and many say the best. So I went there, and then I applied for a job at the Arizona
Republic. I loved Arizona, and I went down there. I'll never forget that the editor said
"We really like reporters who are really committed to the newspaper
and to the profession. We want people that for them: God is number one, family number two, and then
their job." I thought, "Is he nuts?" My job is number one, my wife number two, and everything
else is after that. It honestly did not compute with me because I was absolutely focused on my
career as a journalist.
Right from journalism school I went to the Chicago
Tribune, which was unusual; but I had so much experience for a kid...because I knew since I
was a little kid what I wanted to do. So I started as a general-assignments reporter. I went
to Yale to get my masters in law, came back as a legal editor, covered federal courts,
covered criminal courts, covered the Illinois Supreme Court and really enjoyed it but without
God, without a moral framework, my personal life was out of control, the drinking, the
carousing. I had no moral framework of how to do journalism so I would do whatever it took to
get the story. I would steal; I would commit a federal crime by stealing federal documents
from the courthouse. I made friends with the court clerk, and he allowed me to go by myself
into the court files; and so I would go in there, and I would beat the competition all the
time by finding all this wonderful stuff in the court files that no one knew about. So when I
would find something particularly juicy, I would slip it under my vest, and I would steal it
so when the story broke, the competition couldn't find the documents. Then I gave it a day or
two, then I put it back. I figured it was worth it because I never got
caught.
I would lie. I remember covering stories at the
police headquarters, I would call the witness to a crime and I would say, "Hello this is Lee
Strobel calling from police headquarters." Well the implication was that I was with the
police department. I intentionally mislead and deceived them, because I figured they would
tell me more than if they knew I was a reporter. There was nothing that I wouldn't do in
pursuit of a story. I would step on my colleagues, in a very Machiavellian way. I, behind the
scenes, destroyed the career of one of my colleagues because he was in my way. By the time I
was done with him, he was fired from the Chicago Tribune. That's a terrible thing to do, to
destroy someone's career; but I did it. And I didn't care. It didn't bother me one iota,
because he was in my way. Get rid of him, destroy him...and I was able to do it. He got
called on his honeymoon to be informed that he had been fired from his job...a terrible
thing. But, as I said, I had no moral sense of right or wrong. If something was in my way, I
got rid of it.
A woman friend of mine in college came up to me
one day and said, "I have bad news I'm pregnant." I said, "That's not bad news; abortion's
legal in New York. Why don't you get rid of it? I'll help you; I'll arrange it for you." So I
arranged for the destruction of that unborn child. It didn't bother me at all. Something was
in the way...I was getting rid of it. That was my atheistic mindset: completely focused on
achieving my goal of success at the Chicago Tribune.
My wife was agnostic. She had virtually no
experience with church growing up. She never really thought much about God. Then, one
day we moved into an apartment building; and the woman downstairs was a Christian. And she
built a friendship with my wife, and they became best friends. And they would talk and spend
time together. It was very natural in their conversations for Linda to share her faith with
my wife, Leslie; and Leslie was fascinated. No one had ever told me about Christianity
before. Not really. Here we are in our late twenties at the time. She just soaked it up. So
Linda said a very interesting thing to herself. She said, "Okay, I'm stuck here. I've shared
my faith with Leslie who I can't get to cross the line of faith. I don't know what to do, but
I know instinctually what not to do: I should not bring Leslie to church (because Linda had a
very traditional church, and she knew that if she brought Leslie to her church it would be so
disorienting...Leslie wouldn't know when to sit, when to stand or when to open a Bible. She
wouldn't have a Bible, she wouldn't know an Ephesians from a Philippians, and she would feel
like a fish out of water. The sermon would be directed at Christians (as opposed to non
believers)." So Linda said, "I can't bring her to that church, but I heard about a new
church called Willow Creek. It was meeting in a movie theater right near our house. And
Willow Creek had a traditional worship service on Wednesday nights; but on weekends they did
service designed for Christians to bring their non-believing friends to...where things were
explained in a way that non-Christians could understand it...where people weren't put on the
spot and made to do things they weren't ready to...where the sermon would be very practical
and application-oriented and designed in articulated language that non-believers could
understand...where the music would not be from the eighteen hundreds, but music that people
could really get in to." So Linda brought my wife to that church, and my wife loved it. I
remember she came home that day and said, "This is a great church!" And I said, "This is an
oxymoron: you can't have great and church in the same sentence. Its like military
intelligence: they don't go together!" But, anyway, I said, "If you want to continue this, go
ahead; but don't try to get me to go."
And so she came to me in the fall of 1973
and said, "Lee, I've made a big decision. I've become a follower of Jesus Christ." I
thought this was the worst possible thing that could happen to our marriage. I thought we
were gonna get divorced. I felt like I'd married one Leslie and now she's changed into
something else. I wasn't ready for that. I didn't want that. And I said, "Look, if you can't
face life on your own two feet, if you have to out your faith in a book of mythology and bad
history and make-believe, then you go ahead and do that. But, number one, don't give them any
of our money, because that's what they're after; and, number two, don't try to get me to go
because I'm too smart for that."
So I was a really nice guy, but she continued to
go and to invite me from time to time; and I wouldn't go, and it was a very stressful time in
our marriage. In fact, we are writing a book about it, a how-to-live-with-a-non-believer kind
of book; because it was very stressful. We almost did get divorced, but there was something
very attractive at the same time in her life and the changes in her, in her character, and in
her values, and in the way she related to me and the children: it just intrigued me. So then
finally on January 20, 1980 she said, "Why don't you come with me to church?" She said, "You
don't have to stay for the whole service, just come and listen to the music...you'll like the
music." I said, "Ok. I'm gonna go." So I come into this church, and the music really was in
my style. I could enjoy it. I could relate to it. I learned from the lyrics. They used a
drama that really captured a slice of my life, like they know what I was thinking. And then
the pastor got up and did the message called "Basic Christianity" and just explained
Christianity. I was twenty-eight years old. I had never heard the word grace explained before
in my life. I thought grace was something Christians said before a meal. He explained it. I
thought that, number one: I don't believe it, I'm still an atheist; but, number two: if this
is true, this has huge implications for my life.
So I decided to take my legal training and my
journalism training and investigate: is there any credibility to Christianity? I would do
what I did at the Chicago Tribune. I would check out stories to see if they were true, if
they could be printed in the papers. So I would investigate. I went out, and I applied those
skills to the question of, " Who is Jesus Christ?" I didn't do it with an antagonist
attitude; I did it with a journalist's attitude...I said, "Give me the facts. I'm going to
look at both sides, I'm going to look at other world religions." And I began to do that. And
it was an amazing journey: to look at other faith systems and see the eternal contradictions
that, to me, disqualified them from being true. And yet to see in Christianity, as I looked
into the historical evidence for Jesus, as I looked at the reliability of the New Testament,
as I looked at the fulfillment of Old Testament prophesies in the New Testament, as I looked
at the resurrection: very powerful evidence. And I looked at some of the most brilliant legal
minds of history: Simon Greenleaf of Harvard, Sir Lionel Luck, who, the Guinness Book of
World Records describes as the most successful lawyer in the history of the world (had more
murder trials won in a row than any other defense attorney ever). These are brilliant people
who have applied the laws of evidence to the resurrection accounts and walked away convinced
that they are true.
My big hang-up was that it was legend...that this
was a legend that grew up a long time after Jesus...and then I found a very interesting fact
that to me was one of the pivotal facts in my investigation. There is a passage in scripture,
1 Corinthians 15:3, that is a creed recited by the earliest Christians that Paul is providing
there for the Corinthians; and in fact he refers to the fact that he already has provided
this, "This what I received, I pass on to you." In other words he says this is tradition that
I am now formally passing on to you, and it affirms the essentials of Christianity. That
Jesus died for our sins. That he was buried and resurrected on the third day and he mentions
the eyewitnesses to whom he appears.
It mentions skeptics like James and Paul. This
Creed can be dated back by scholars from a wide range of theological belief to within 2 years
to sixty months after the resurrection itself. This is an extremely early account that Paul
is preserving for us. Its not his words...he's passing this along. And when you look at
Sherwin White, the great classical historian from Oxford- Cambridge (he did studies about the
rate at which legends grew up in the ancient world, and he found that two generations of time
was not enough for legend to grow up and thoroughly destroy a solid core of historical
truth). And yet here you have something not two generations of time...but that goes back to
within two to five years of the events themselves. And the statements in that creed (which
were affirmed that it was given by Paul by the witnesses themselves, Peter and James), goes
back to the cross itself, to the eyewitness accounts. So there has never been a legend in so
short time. In 1844 a historian said, "I challenge anyone anywhere to come up with any
example in history where legend grew up that fast and thoroughly destroyed or distorted
solid, historical belief...it has never happened that anyone has been able to find." That was
very powerful to me. It told me that this wasn't wishful thinking, it wasn't legendary
development. This was something that we had a creed of the early church that goes right back
to the events themselves, virtually; and, therefore, was very fresh and trustworthy in terms
of what it conveys...and when you look at the other aspects of the empty tomb, the eyewitness
accounts, the early nature, the extra-biblical evidence, the emergence of the early
church...I call them the five Es...you look at all that together; and that's a very powerful
case for the resurrection.
So I did this investigation for almost 2 years of
my life: looking at evidence inside the Bible, outside the Bible. One of my favorite things:
I found 110 facts outside the Bible recorded in ancient history that confirmed (and again
these are many things some are higher quality than others, most are somewhat questionable)
that form together a very powerful corroborative aspect. One of them, my favorite, is a guy
named Thalus, who was a Greek historian in the first century, who wrote a history of the
Eastern Mediterranean world in 52AD. So this is right after Jesus' life. Thalus was not a
believer and Thalus' works have actually been lost; but in the year 221, a guy named Julius
Africanus quotes Thalus, and Thalus had written about the darkness that fell over the Earth
during the crucifixion of Jesus Christ. Now when I had seen that Bible verse, I remember
thinking, "Don't you think someone other than Mathew, Mark, Luke or John would have noticed
this." And Thalus not only recorded it, but he tried to explain it away as being an eclipse
of the sun. Which, given the timing of the Crucifixion, it could not have been. And I thought
Thalus' was a weak historical claim; but the more you investigate Thalus you find that's a
very powerful bit of corroborative evidence and it's not the only bit. There's other
references to the darkness outside the Bible. I just had a great time as a journalist
investigating all this stuff. On the plus side, journalists respond to evidence; the negative
side is I tended to be an observer, I was never a participant, I was the critical observer. I
didn't join anything; I kept things at arms length. So the idea of making a commitment to God
was alien to me; and yet the evidence was so powerful that on November 8, 1981 (after
spending two years of checking this out) I just realized that in light of this torrent of
evidence that points so powerfully towards Christianity, it would have required more faith to
retain my atheism than to become a Christian. Because to maintain my atheism I would have had
to defy the evidence. To become a Christian, I just had to make a step of faith in the same
direction that the evidence was pointing. That's logical, that's rational, and that's what I
did.
On that day I repented of my sin, which took quite
a while, and gave my life to Christ. I thought maybe my wife would be interested in the fact
that I just did this; so I thought I'd tell her. So I came out and was walking down the
hallway and turned into our kitchen, and my wife was standing there with our daughter who was
almost five; and our daughter was standing in front of her reaching up and touching the
faucet, for the first time...that's how tall she was. And she said, "Daddy, look I can touch
it. I can reach it." And I said, "Oh wow you're getting so big." And I gave her a hug, and
she ran off; and I said to my wife, "That's how I feel! I feel for a year and nine months
I've been reaching out and reaching out, and I just touched Jesus Christ. It's real and it's
true, and I just gave my life to him." She started crying and said, "You hardhearted
son-of-a-*&#, I've been telling you this for two years." And it had turned out that she
had met some women in her church, and she told them about her husband who is a hard-hearted,
hard-headed journalist that she didn't have much hope for, and they said we'll pray this
verse Ezekiel 33:23 [the correct citation is 36:26]. It says more over, "I will give you a
new heart and I will put a new spirit within you. I'll remove your heart of stone, and I will
give you a heart of flesh." And she said, "I've been praying that every day for two years."
And God began to answer that prayer as I opened my life to him and yielded myself to him,
began to seek to follow his ways; and, now, empowered by the Holy Spirit, my attitudes, my
philosophy, my worldview, my professional standards, my marriage, my job...everything began
to change so much so that my little daughter Alison had only known in her first five years a
dad that was angry. I remember...so frustrated from work one day and I kicked the wall and I
put my foot right through the wall, anger over life and frustration...that's all she knew of
her dad. I'd come home drunk or I would come home angry and that's all she had known. And
then five or six months after I became a Christian, having seen how God changed my attitudes
and my life, she came up to my wife and said, "Mommy, I want God to do for me what he did for
daddy." She gave her life to Christ at age five and now has graduated from college and is now
in the ministry, trying to reach this next generation; and my son is now going to seminary,
he graduated from bible college this year and is going to seminary here in California in the
fall to study philosophy and religion.
My whole life has changed: my attitude, my family,
all of our eternities, part of it is because of a church that took some risks to communicate
the gospel in a simple way, in a way that didn't inadvertently chase away the very people
that God was calling them to reach. And then, within thirty days of becoming a Christian,
Leslie came to me one day and said, "Man I found this verse It says pray for your heart's
desire." I said, "Oh man I know what my heart's desire is. Its not to be legal editor of the
Chicago Tribune. I want to run my own paper; I want to be managing editor. I want to run a
newspaper, because I want to make a bigger contribution than just being one cog in a big
newspaper." She said, "You think that we ought to pray about this?" And I said, "Why not."
So, we began to pray about this. Boom! Within thirty days God opened an opportunity for me to
become editor of a newspaper that the Washington Post actually said is one of the finest
small papers in America: the Columbia Daily Tribune in Columbia, Missouri...which is where
the university of Missouri Journalism School is. And I came down and became editor. It was a
real test! at that point I am a brand new Christian and didn't know virtually anything about
the Christian life. I knew a lot about the history of Jesus. So I said to my self that, if I
want to run this newspaper, I want to be like Jesus. I want to do it the way Jesus would do
it. Now what would that look like? So we went down there. It was a little experiment for a
new Christian. I had 44 people in my newsroom; and I came in. Everyone thought, because I
came form the Chicago Tribune, I would be a big shot and throw my weight around. They were
taken aback because I came in with a servant's attitude. That was one of the things Leslie
and I had stressed together: let's be servants, let's do what Jesus would do, let's serve
these people, try to maximize their gifts, try to respect them as people. We will not even
get near any moral ambiguity in terms of the way that we do Journalism; we will identify
ourselves as reporters; we will always stay on the ethical line of
everything.
I remember the big question in my mind - I had won
some big awards in Chicago for investigative reporting and for community service journalism.
I wondered, "Could I be successful as a journalist and be strictly adhering to ethical
standards?" We said, "We are gonna find out." And I stressed to everybody- we had many
times when we could have skated over the line and really scored on something and said, "No,
we are not gonna do it...there is another way...there's got to be a better way...there's got
to be an honest way." And, two years later the paper was named by the Missouri press
association as the best paper in the state of Missouri, beating St. Lois and Kansas City
papers. It can be done...we did it...we stayed on the right side and did the right thing. God
blessed it, and I think we had a terrific newspaper.
Although I missed Chicago...not for the Chicago
tribune but for Willow Creek church...I thought all churches were like that. I thought that
it was a typical church. We want to Missouri, and it wasn't quite like that. We moved back to
Chicago mainly to attend Willow Creek church, and I became assistant managing editor of the
Daily Herald which is the third biggest paper in Illinois; and God began to call me into
ministry.
That was a big struggle for me, because I believed
very strongly in secular journalism. Christian journalists in secular journalism: I wanted to
stay that way, and I wanted to be a voice & I wanted to be salt and light in that
environment. But it was unmistakable; it took two years of God tugging and making it clear.
But, in the end, I knew it was either obedience or not. I knew that, for me, what God wanted
me to do would be for me to go into full-time Christian work especially in the area of
evangelism. I remember that, at the time, I had never shared my faith before. I wasn't an
evangelist; I was just a new Christian. I was scared to share my faith; I didn't know what to
say or what to do.
I remember one day at the Daily Herald...it was
one of those days when everything goes wrong...all the deadlines are blown, and I prayed in
the morning, and I said, " God, I need your help on this, because I'm going to go ballistic
on this. I really need your help!" And God really came through, and I really got through the
day.
When I was a supervisor, I didn't want my
reporters to think, "Well, for me to get ahead, I'd better say that I'm a Christian
otherwise Lee's not going to promote me." They'd think I played favorites or something, so
there are just a couple of things that I found personally helpful. The first thing is to be
myself...not to say I'm going to share my faith the way that somebody else might. I'm going
to be myself.
If you look in the Bible there are about six
different examples of different styles in which people shared their faith. You have Peter who
gets up at Pentecost and talks to the crowd and, BOOM, hits them between the eyes and says,
"You just killed the Messiah!" God used it, and three thousand people repented, and the
church was born. Peter's was a very confrontational thing, and I used to think, "If I'm going
to be an evangelist, doggon it, I'd better be that kind: in your face." But no, there are
other styles.
Paul, in Acts 17, talking to philosophers: he
didn't hit them between the eyes. Instead, he reasoned with them. He answered their questions
and presented the evidence. He had a dialogue with them...a different kind of a style, more
of an intellectual style. If you look at the blind man in John 9: Jesus heals a blind man.
The blind man doesn't confront the religious leaders. He doesn't reason with the religious
leaders. He just says, "I was BLIND and now I see" (John 9:25). Deal with it. You figure it
out.
So there is another style of evangelizing...the
testimonial style: this is my story. It's the style I usually use .Others, like Matthew:
after Matthew became a disciple, there is a fascinating mention. He threw a party for his
tax-collecting friends and invited Jesus and the other disciples so they could rub shoulders
and spiritual sparks would happen...so its more of an interpersonal style more of a
relational style of evangelism.
There is the story of the woman who was making
clothes for the poor people of her town. She was serving people in need, and then she dies
and of course she is raised from the dead. So there is an advantage to having that particular
style. Hers was a serving style. She would serve people and thought that she would
communicate her faith that way. So there is about a half of a dozen different types of styles
that you can see in the New Testament. We don't have to do it in the same way. You can be
"you" and be effective in sharing your faith. I don't have to stand up on my chair in a
newsroom and shout the gospel, but I have a testimonial style; and there are opportunities
that I've had with journalists to be able to tell my story and answer their
questions.
I think the first thing is to be yourself, and the
second thing is to drop hints early that you are a Christian. Just let it be known in a
subtle way. For instance, you ask somebody, "What did you do this weekend?" And they said,
"Well, I washed the car; I went out to dinner with my wife; and I went to a movie. What did
you do, Lee?" "Oh well, I washed my car too; and I watched that game on TV. Wasn't that a
great game? And I went to church, and I did such and such." All I have to do is just drop the
hint...just let him know...that's initially all I've got to do. So be yourself. Drop hints
early. Then, third, hangout...spend time with the non-believers.
It's uncomfortable; I got real uncomfortable
hanging out in bars after I stopped drinking. Right after I became a Christian, I stopped
drinking; and, so, I didn't like to go back into bars. It was a bad place for me, but God
protected me. I've never fallen back. I've gone in places where I've been uncomfortable...to
hang out...to spend time with my friends in journalism who are non-believers. And what I find
is they know that I'm a Christian, and I just spend time with them and love them and care for
them. At some point, a spiritual conversation is going to come up. You can almost guarantee
that.
The fourth thing to do is to pray. Chances are a
spiritual conversation is going to take place after work, down the block, or over lunch. I
continue to reach out to a lot of journalists who I know at the Tribune and elsewhere who are
not believers. They know I'm a Christian, and you know what they are looking for: someone to
talk to a lot. They have questions about faith. If something comes up in their life, who are
they going to go to? Who is the person in the newsroom who doesn't know any Christians when
catastrophe strikes in their life and their wife gets cancer or their kid gets hit by a car?
Who are they going to go to? They are going to go to you, because they know that Strobel goes
to church. "I'm going to go to him and ask him for help...or something." Personally, I find
that's been helpful. I was in downtown Chicago, and I ran into a guy who was a competitor of
mine when I was at the Tribune; and I hadn't seen him in twenty years. He's one of these
really tough Chicago reporters with the cigar and pork pie hat. He's the archetype Chicago
reporter. He said, "Strobel, how the #*#@ are you, you son-of-a #*#@?" I said, "I'm doing
good, John." He said, "Are you still writing for that #*#@ Tribune?." I said, "No, John.
Actually, I've become a Christian; and I'm a minister now." His cigar almost fell out of his
mouth. He looks at me and says, "Well, I'll be damned!"
I shared my faith with him, and it was really
great. He was really interested. I call it "the unexpected adventure". If you are yourself,
and if you drop hints, and if you are praying for people, and if you're hanging out with
them, then something's going to happen. You never know when or where, and I think that's the
great unexpected adventure of Christianity!
***give me your comments about this
page***
(posted 17 March 2002; latest link or comment update 18 February
2015)
***********************************
You have just read a very brief example of the
powerful, supernatural transformation of a person's life which is possible through the
acceptance of Jesus as your savior. Are you tired of life as it now is for you? He will
accept you just as you are right this second! Consider accepting Jesus now
[check it
out]!
|