My Story
I suffered from an identity crisis right from birth. Born an identical twin in a
Jewish family in Overbrook Park, Philadelphia, I struggled to know who I was,
the purpose of life, and my part in it.
The conservative synagogue my family attended was just a few doors from my home
on the same side of the street. Although I was intrigued by the Old Testament
stories and knew that the Jews were God’s chosen people, I did not know what we
were chosen for. I had heard about a coming Messiah from time to time. There
were so many things that we (the Jews) needed to be delivered from. But my
understanding did not go very deep.
It’s not as if I didn’t try to understand. At the ripe old age of six, there was
a gorge down the street where I used to go to seek God. The neighborhood lore
was that a bridge used to run over the gorge, but it collapsed while cars were
traveling over it. The fact that there were tires and car parts down the steep
sides of the gorge seemed to confirm this horrifying tale. Although I was afraid
to be there, I thought God would be in this sacred place, so I would go there
and ask Him questions that my parents and others could not seem to answer.
When I turned eight, my family moved from Pennsylvania to New Jersey. We blended
nicely with the natives (the Gentiles) in our new neighborhood. After a year or
two, my parents no longer required that we attend synagogue. When I turned 13,
my grandmother died and even the thought of a Bar Mitzvah faded. Religion and
tradition stopped being a priority in our household.
During my high school years, my parent’s relationship went down hill. By my
senior year, they were separated, never to join together again. Senior year was
a time of regression. I experimented with drugs and alcohol. I joined a rock
band, playing the drums. Dave, my twin, played the guitar. It was a time of
independence and rebellion, but our upbringing prevented us from getting into
any major trouble.
Although my three brothers and I did well academically, I entered my freshman
year at LaSalle College (now a university) disillusioned with life. Satan loves
disillusion, as it offers a chance for him to allure people away from the truth.
Though the glamour of drugs and alcohol had worn off, I now sought meaningful
communication with anyone who was willing to talk about life. The first person I
found was John, a fellow freshman who lived on the same floor I did. Like me, he
preferred talking late into the night over drinking or drugs. After his gay
tendencies revealed themselves, however, I sought a counselor instead.
In my counseling sessions, I discoursed frequently about death. This alarmed my
counselor and she brought in a psychologist. He didn’t see me as suicidal, but
acknowledged that I was grappling with some legitimate questions about life.
Neither he nor the counselor, however, could provide satisfying answers.
For some extra money, I took a job on weekends as a mobile disc jockey. I
enjoyed the music, dancing, and emcee role, showing people a fun time. In
between classes and homework, I would relax in the music room. Bernard, the
janitor, showed an unusual interest in me. We quickly became friends. Shortly
thereafter, I took up video arcade games, and Bernard would supply me with
quarters. He seemed to have an endless supply, which, at the time, I never
seemed to question.
One day, he asked me what my license plate number was and proceeded to announce
that my number would win the lottery. The next day, he nonchalantly tossed me
the paper. Can you guess what the winning number was? Bernard, it seemed, had
psychic powers. He even claimed that he could cause me to think about him, even
call him. Often when I called, he would exclaim that I had just done his
bidding. Whenever I tried to find where he lived, I was unable.
Years later, when I attempted to find Bernard, there was no record that he ever
worked for the college. It turns out, I didn’t need to find him. Even though I
had moved so many times that my parents had trouble keeping track of me,
whenever I least expected it, Bernard would appear. Who was this mysterious
person and why did he show up in my life at that time? I realized later that, by
distracting me from my spiritual quest through appealing alternatives, Bernard
was one of Satan’s decoys to keep me from the truth.
By the end of my freshman year, a girl from my home town in New Jersey was
showing interest in a serious relationship. I went along for the ride. We got an
apartment together 30 minutes from college. I attempted to commute my second
year, but saddled with a dysfunctional relationship, I soon dropped out of
LaSalle, even though I was just shy of a 3.6 gpa.
Now I was responsible for taking care of the two of us. I landed a job selling
family portraits for straight commission and began to travel from store to store
and invest 10 days per stint in each new place. Being on the road quickly
revealed that my girlfriend was interested in whomever happened to be around at
the moment. Soon, that person wasn’t me.
Now on my own, my work had become traveling photo salesman by default. I would
meet hundreds of people every day (mainly women) in the food and department
stores I was assigned to. I enjoyed the challenge of selling, but there were
many lonely days when there was no friend with whom to talk.
In early 1982, during a photo promotion in Reading, Pennsylvania, a couple came
into the store and promptly bought some family portraits. After I secured their
fivedollar deposit, they began to question me. The first thing I found
surprising was that they asked my name. No customer had ever asked before. Then
they asked me about my background. When they heard that I was Jewish, they
seemed excited. I told them that I was pretty streetwise.
I noticed right away that there was something different about them. The comment
just flowed out unexpectedly.
“I see something in the two of you that I have never seen before. What is it?”
They chuckled, joyfully acknowledging that what I had just said was true indeed.
Instead of answering directly, they continued their line of questioning.
“What is the hope of a Jewish person?” they asked.
I replied, “I don’t know. I believe in God and I try to be the best person that
I can be.”
“From our understanding of the Jewish scriptures, it seems as though Israel was
waiting for the Messiah.”
“Well, I don’t read those anymore. Though, I still remember some stories from
Hebrew School.” I looked at them intently. “You are going to tell me that you
think Jesus Christ is the Messiah.” They laughed, incredulous to how fast I read
them. “I told you that I’ve been on the streets for a while. I don’t believe
that stuff about Jesus. If you want to, that’s up to you.”
They excused themselves and promised to come back later that day. They had
something they wanted to show me.
Upon their return, they presented a chart showing all the major world religions.
The heading stated something like, “The Truth of Being Born Again and the Error
of All Other Religions.” I remember thinking how audacious that title seemed to
me. I also remember the man pointing his finger at me in a strong way (I did not
like when anyone did that) and challenging me.
“Larry,” he said. “I challenge you. Just pray to your God, the God of Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob, and just ask Him if Jesus is the Jewish Messiah. If He’s not,
you have nothing to lose. But He is…”
Never again was I to see this couple or even remember their names. If only they
knew the events that were soon to occur in my life.
That night, I returned to my rundown motel. A bar was attached to the side and I
was having a beer, wondering which gal I might pick up. One was showing interest
from a distance, but somehow, I was too bothered about the events of the day to
pursue it. That couple had gotten through a chink in my armor. In disgust, I
left the beer and the gal where they were.
Back at the room, I tossed and turned. Restless, I turned on the tv. The first
words I heard were from Pat Robertson of the 700 Club. “I know some of you Jews
are watching tonight.” I turned around to see who was in the room with me. “The
Bible says that you are a stubborn and stiff-necked people. You always demand
miraculous signs.” He flashed scriptures on to the screen from the Old Testament
to prove his point.
Then he did something that I will never forget. He pointed his big, boney finger
at the viewing audience and said the very same words I’d heard earlier in the
day. “I challenge you Jews who are watching. Just pray to your God, the God of
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and ask Him whether Jesus is the Jewish Messiah. What
do you have to lose?”
Well! Two Gentiles had challenged me in the same day about some Jesus who they
claimed was raised from the dead. Until now, the only times I had heard Jesus’
name were when someone from the old neighborhood hit their finger with a hammer!
Now there were two boney fingers both pointing at me to pray.
Years earlier, I had asked God for answers about life, but I had never heard
anything back. Still, I did believe in God. I had always believed in God, since
I could remember.
I prayed out loud for the first time in my life. “God, I’m a Jew”—like He didn’t
know that—”I don’t believe in Jesus, but if He is really alive like these
Gentiles are saying to me, then I will put my faith in Him. If He’s alive, then
it should not be too difficult for him to reveal Himself to me. You know, since
we Jews always demand miraculous signs.” (I was still upset about Pat’s
comment.) “Come to me and show Yourself to me and I will believe in You and
commit myself to You.”
After putting the onus back on God, I fell easily back asleep. After all, it
wasn’t my problem anymore.
The next day as I was in the shower, hair lathered, I heard a voice. Not
audibly, but in my mind. I had never had this experience before.
“I have come in answer to your prayers,” it said.
The voice was so clear that I did not even finish rinsing the shampoo out of my
hair. I put a towel around me and went, shivering, out into the room. In the
bathroom, there was a shower and toilet. Outside was a foyer with a double sink.
My hair dryer had been plugged into the big mirror’s outlet for all five days I
had been there.
The room was pitch dark. I sat on one of the double beds closest to the
bathroom. Then asked out loud, “How did you come in answer to my prayers?”
The voice spoke again. “What you are looking for is on the mirror.”
“The mirror… ?”
I stood up and flicked on the light. I was stunned to see symbols scratched into
the glass of the mirror. They did not spell anything or mean anything in
English. They looked Greek to me.
The next thing I knew, the clerk and the motel manager were trying to calm me
down as I attempted to ascertain where the letters had come from. They assured
me that the writing had not been there when I moved in. Terrified, I asked for
another room, but there were none available. For the next five days, I continued
to stare at the symbols, wondering how they got there.
I called my mother and twin brother to tell them of the bizarre incident.
Dwayne, my brother’s college roommate, seemed to affirm that God was revealing
something to me, but it all seemed too weird and far fetched to me.
This event did not convert me, but it did get me to investigate the New
Testament for myself. “I don’t trust any Christians as far as I can throw them,”
I would mutter as I read through the enthralling stories in a book I never had
reason to look at before.
Very quickly, I became enamored with Christ. He was like a super hero. In fact,
reading the New Testament was more like reading a comic book than a religious
book. How could Jesus live like that? Always doing good and overcoming the odds?
I even called each of my parents and asked them why I had not learned of this
Jewish rabbi before. What didn’t they tell me about him? I needed to have
Christians challenge me to look into it. I even told my mom about the mirror
incident. I wondered what she thought of her nice unstable Jewish boy.
One day, I read in the gospels the story of Jesus visiting His hometown and how
they were taken aback and offended. After all, He grew up with them. What was He
now claiming about Himself? They were so angry that they intended to throw Him
over the cliff on which the town was built. The sentence ended at the bottom of
the righthand page.
I turned the page in suspense and read, “He walked right through the crowd and
went on His way.” I kept flipping back and forth to see if I was perhaps missing
a page. I was not. How could Jesus walk through a mob of one thousand angry
Jews? I have personally seen a single Orthodox Jew clear out a whole New York
City subway train because one of the passengers provoked him. Now here was Jesus
walking right through their midst.
He must be God, I thought. I felt afraid of what that might mean.
During the time of my reading the New Testament, I visited my brother at his
university. His roommate, Dwayne, turned out to be a Christian. He shared a very
clear explanation of God’s plan for mankind and how Jesus, being the Messiah,
had completed the work on the cross, dying for my sins. He drew out a bridge
with God on one side and man on the other.
“Which side are you on?” he asked.
“Man’s side. Which side are you on?”
“God’s.”
“Well, how do I get over there?”
Dwayne shared John 1:12: “Yet to all those who had received Him, to those who
believed in His name, He gave the right to become children of God.”
I told Dwayne that I had already done that on my own. He then shared 1 John
5:11–13. This passage talked about knowing for sure that I had eternal life. As
he was still sharing with me, I bowed my head in response to the challenge to
know for sure that I was going to heaven and that I was saved right now. The
date: November 15, 1982. I was 19 years old.
Over time, I learned that the symbols scratched on my mirror in Reading,
Pennsylvania, were the Greek symbols of the Alpha and Omega.
"I was in the Spirit on the Lord’s Day, and heard behind me a great voice, as of
a trumpet, saying, I am Alpha and Omega, the First and the Last: and what thou
seest, write in a book, and send it unto the seven churches which are in Asia."
(Rev. 1:10,11 kjv)
It became clear to me that Jesus had come in answer to the prayer of this
stubborn and stiff-necked Jew. It is interesting to note that the voice that
accompanied the symbols was, in fact, Jesus Himself, and that He was alive. Was
it possible that I could now find my true identity in Jesus Christ?
Some have asked me how I know that it was Jesus, not Satan, who engraved the
symbols on the mirror that day. My response begins with a bit of sarcasm. “Thank
you, Satan, for doing such a thing—for getting me to read the Bible and helping
me get to know the Jewish Messiah.”
My point is clear. Satan does not lead people to Jesus. I know Satan as a
deceiver who loves to promote fear, pride, and confusion. He loves to mimic God
and to try to steal His praise, honor, and glory. If he did write the message in
an attempt to lead me away from Jesus, he made a whopper of a miscalculation!
Within a day or two of praying with Dwayne, I approached David, my twin brother.
“Dave, you know how God has always been obvious to us…”
“Yes,” he said with hesitation.
“Well, now Jesus is obvious to us.”
Within two weeks, David came to the Jewish Messiah. Now we are eternal twins
instead of just earthly twins. Now we are laboring together to help one another
find our identity in Him.
Though I was unworthy, undeserving, and not outwardly seeking at the time, God
chose to reveal something about Himself to me. It also changed my relationship
with mirrors forever.
I had always been uncomfortable looking at myself in the mirror. I did not know
who I was as a person, nor my meaning and purpose in life. It’s challenging
enough to be a twin, but even if you are not, how do you look confidently in the
mirror every morning, ready to tackle God’s plan for your life? Now, for the
first time, I could. I knew what my life was about. It was living for God,
accepting who He had made me to be, and appreciating the special uniqueness that
He created in me for such a time as this—to serve Him.
Since then, God has shown me many things about who we as believers are in
Christ. Listen to these passages and relate them to my story and to yours.
"For if any be a hearer of the word, and not a doer, he is like unto a man
beholding his natural face in a glass [mirror]: For he beholdeth himself, and
goeth his way, and straightway forgetteth what manner of man he was." (James
1:23,24 kjv)
"Now the Lord is that Spirit: and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is
liberty. But we all, with open face beholding as in a glass [mirror] the glory
of the Lord, are changed into the same image from glory to glory, even as by the
Spirit of the Lord." (2 Cor. 3:17,18 kjv)
Through the mirror of scripture, I have found that which I had been seeking my
whole life—my identity.