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A Jewish birthright is completed in Christ
by
Steve Becker

Who am I? I am not a famous actor or ballplayer or politician. What I am is a special creation whom God’s hand has guided and protected from the start. Born Jewish, my Jewishness remains my birthright. Some of my earliest memories are of my great grandfather, we called him "Zeyder", praying each day at sundown wearing his yarmulke and talis.  As a very young child I can remember the men of the family going to the temple on the most important Jewish holidays, the Day of Atonement and the Jewish New Year.

At the age of five I was starting to have trouble seeing. Learning to read became difficult. Several eye doctors actually blamed this problem on me acting out because I was jealous of the impending birth of my sister. Eventually an uncle suggested I be taken to see a neurologist. He discovered immediately that there was something very wrong.

I was admitted to the New York Medical Center with a diagnosis of brain cancer. However, Dr. Bronson Ray did not believe this was the correct diagnosis and decided, with my parents permission, to perform an exploratory operation. As the story goes, I asked to speak to the doctor before the anesthesia took effect. I told him not to worry, that God would be guiding his hand. My parents said Dr. Ray told them he cried when I said those words.

Born Jewish,
my Jewishness remains my birthright.

What Dr. Ray found was merely a buildup of fluid on the brain which was corrected by widening the ventricles. If he had not gone against the book I would have died in six months and the autopsy would have shown that they had made a mistake.

As a result of this condition, there was damage to both of my optic nerves that resulted in my having only light perception in my left eye and the ability to see large shapes and bright colors in my right eye.  During this time (early to mid-1960’s), blind children still went to special schools. I attended the New York Institute for the Education of the Blind from first through twelfth grade. It was here that I learned Braille.

It should be noted that blind children are the same as all other children. I received more than my share of demerits and detention throughout my school days! But it was at this school where I had my first exposure to Christianity.

I opened the
door the first
words out of my mouth were,
"Is there a God
and does He
forgive me?"

Christmas was strange for me as I had never been exposed to the true meaning of it. In my school, there was a Christmas program every year and my parents allowed me to sing carols as long as I didn’t say the words “Christ the Lord”.

I came home on weekends and, starting at about age ten, received instruction at Hebrew school once a week as I prepared for my bar mitzvah. I was bar mitzvah’ed in the Jewish tradition at age 13. Part of the bar mitzvah responsibility requires reading a section of the Torah in front of those gathered.  Because I could not see the Torah, it was necessary for me to memorize all the passages. The seriousness of this ceremony made me realize that I wanted to have a closer relationship with God, but I didn't know how to go about it and didn’t feel that I had anyone to show me the way.
 

At age 14, I began to rebel. I was just a lost teenager in the Bronx. I started down a path to destroy my life. Anything goes: alcohol, all kinds of drugs, risky behavior and total disrespect of my parents and myself. Fortunately I never spent a night in jail. Several times I did not come home at night and left my parents wondering where I was. As a parent now, I can only imagine what they were going through. Somehow, through all of this, I maintained very good grades in school.

And then came college. It must have been a night in December 1973. I was 19 years old and tripping on LSD. My roommate called the crisis center on campus at SUNY Binghamton, New York. The two crisis counselors who responded happened to be members of Intervarsity Christian Fellowship. I did not know it at the time but both Ginny and Dave were praying before they came up to my dorm room because they had never witnessed to a person who was tripping on acid. When I opened the door the first words out of my mouth were, “Is there a God and does He forgive me?” Just as I had opened the door to Ginny and Dave, my words to them opened the door for them to witness to me about Jesus. They stayed with me throughout the night.

For the first time in my life I heard the story of the Savior who was born for the Jews first. They showed me the many prophecies from the Old Testament that Jesus fulfilled. I started going to prayer meetings and learned first hand about Christian love. The Intervarsity Christian Fellowship group on campus answered my questions. Since they knew I was legally blind and could not easily read the printed word, they bought me a Braille New Testament. For the first time in my life I read the word for myself.
 

How a
disrespectful,
drug using,
self-destructive, blind Jew
from the Bronx could change
his life so dramatically.
This is true
miracle.
Just as the
New Testament
is a continuation
of the Old Testament,
my salvation
through the blood
of Christ is a fulfillment of
my spiritual self.

The Lord spoke to me through His word starting with the Gospel of John. I worried about what becoming a Christian would mean for my Jewishness and what my family and friends would say. But the Lord wants us to entrust our problems to Him. This became the first burden I would give to the Lord. On January 27, 1974 in a dorm room in Binghamton, New York, I accepted Christ into my life. It was my “rebirthday.” Salvation and eternity became my spiritual destiny.

My use of drugs stopped immediately and although I lost my taste for alcohol, I gave that up more slowly. Nevertheless, I was a new person in Christ with a new purpose in my life. My change of lifestyle was dramatic. My parents called me gullible, but through God’s word I knew that Jesus was Lord and that he had fulfilled the prophecies from the Old Testament and that He had died and rose from the dead for me.

I cannot express how much the Lord has blessed me with a beautiful wife and daughter and a solid church family.  Old friends from my previous life cannot believe how Jesus has transformed me. How a disrespectful, drug using, self-destructive, blind Jew from the Bronx could change his life so dramatically. This is a true miracle.

After attending graduate school in Buffalo New York where I obtained a Master's in Social Work, my wife Cynde and I moved to Richmond and were blessed with a daughter, Carissa. We were having some trouble locating a reliable babysitter for our two-year-old daughter.  We had seen a lady in our neighborhood who appeared to be babysitting her granddaughter. We took a chance and approached her and asked if she would be interested in watching another child.  Mrs. Rose Cline, our own angel on earth, subsequently agreed to also care for Carissa and it was through her and her daughter, Jeannie Hechler, that we were invited to First Baptist Church. We had visited several churches in the area but had not settled on a church home.

Although First Baptist was a large church, we quickly felt at home. Our daughter grew and thrived in the Youth Program and for that we are forever grateful.

God leads me everyday in my work as a probation officer. I meet and work with all kinds of people with very serious life situations. It is only with Jesus’ guiding hand that I am able to treat all people the same. I have come to understand that all sin is the same in God’s eyes. Each day before I start work, I pray for the Lord to guide my actions. I try to let Jesus’ love and compassion show through me in my interactions with the clients that I work with.

I am not sure what more God has in store for me. I do know I am ready to do His work wherever I am, acknowledging what He has done for me throughout my life every step of the way. I like to think of myself as a completed Jew. Just as the New Testament is a continuation of the Old Testament, my salvation through the blood of Christ is a fulfillment of my spiritual self.

 

 
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