Our Mission

Le’ Chayim! (To Life) Ministries engages Jewish people with the good news of the Messiah, that they might know and follow Him; and encourages, educates & equips other believers to do likewise.


Our Story

Le’ Chayim (To Life) is a ministry in South Florida focused on bringing the good news of the Messiah to Jewish people and equipping the Church to do the same. There are over half a million Jewish people in South Florida who need to hear that new life can be found in the Jewish Messiah, and this is why Le’ Chayim Ministries exists. Ministry founder, Robyn Wilk, is a long-term ministry specialist to Jewish people, and her heart in starting Le’ Chayim is to partner with other believers and churches in South Florida to reach those in Jewish faith with the hope found in Jesus.

 
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Robyn Wilk

Robyn Wilk has been involved in ministry ever since she came to faith in her Messiah on May 2, 1981. She has been involved in full time Jewish ministry since 1988, first serving on a Jewish music gospel team as flute player, singer, music director, and outreach worker.  Following that, she served in New York City, San Francisco, and South Florida.  Her responsibilities included directing a training program for new staff, managing ministry staff, engaging Jewish people with the gospel, discipling new Jewish believers, public speaking, teaching Bible studies, preaching, and helping fellow believers and churches learn how to reach out to their Jewish friends and neighbors. 

She holds a master’s degree in Missiology (study of missions) with an emphasis on Jewish Missions from Fuller Seminary.  In addition, Robyn has a Bachelor of Music Education Degree and a Bachelor of Music degree from Wichita State University, and a Master of Music degree from the University of Michigan.  Her focus was flute performance with a little bit of conducting!

In her free time, she enjoys spending time with her family and especially her nephew, Jonah, and her dog Yofi.  Robyn also teaches flute lessons on the side, and is part of a Christian theater company, presenting the gospel though musical theater.

Robyn is currently launching Le'Chayim (To Life) Ministries.


What is a Jewish Outreach Specialist & Consultant?

A word from Robyn:

“As a Jewish outreach specialist, I engage Jewish people with the good news of the Messiah.  I meet with Jewish people, young and old and in-between, who have questions about faith or just want to know more about what it means to believe in Jesus (Yeshua).  In a sense, I am a facilitator, helping people discover truth. I particularly love talking with people about some of the following:

·       Isn’t the Bible just a bunch of fictitious stories?

·       Everyone has their own truth, don’t they?

·       How can anyone believe in God when so many bad things are done in the name of religion?

·       Why would a good God allow this to happen to me?

·       God doesn’t exist.

·       What’s right for you isn’t necessarily right for me.

·       How can you be Jewish and believe in Jesus?

·       Why should I trust a religion that is so full of hypocrisy

·       What makes faith issues relevant to my life?

Besides meeting with people one-on-one, I get involved with Jewish community events and hang out with Jewish people.  This often leads to spiritual conversations.

As a Jewish outreach consultant, I encourage, educate & equip other believers to share the gospel with everyone, including Jewish people”. 


Robyn’s Faith Story

I grew up in upstate New York.  My parents are both Jewish, and from early on, I was taught that we as Jewish people were different than non-Jewish people.  The main difference was that we did not believe in Jesus.  So, believing in Yeshua (Jesus) wasn’t exactly what my parents dreamt for me, nor was it my life-long goal.   In fact, if someone would have told me that I would someday be a Jewish believer in Jesus, I would have thought that person was crazy!  You see, for me, being Jewish meant not believing in Jesus.

As a kid, I went to synagogue and Sunday school. I learned to read and write Hebrew. We celebrated the Jewish Holidays. Most of my friends were Jewish. When our rabbi told us that Jewish people don’t believe in Jesus, I accepted it without question.

In high school, I felt happiest and most at peace when I played my flute. I decided that my life would be complete if I could become the world’s greatest flute player! I studied at Wichita State University because the flute instructor there was excellent. As I got to know her, I noticed that she seemed to have “something” that I didn’t, apart from her musical ability. I knew she was a believer, but I wasn’t ready to connect that “something special” to her beliefs.

About this time, a girl in my dorm named Janice told me that Jesus was the Jewish Messiah and that I needed to believe in him. I told her a few things that were far less civil. As I left her room that evening, she said, “I’m praying for you and I am having people in my Bible study pray for you.” “Please don’t pray for me,” I snapped back. “I can pray for you if I want—it’s a free country,” she replied.

Well, I thought I better say my own prayer, so that night I asked God to show me the truth, but that I hoped it would not be Jesus.

I began to question why we, as Jewish people, didn’t believe in Jesus.  Shortly after all the prayer had gone up, a few things began to happen.

In an English class, we were assigned term papers.  We were told that we were not going to choose our own subject.  The teacher had pre-assigned topics written on pieces of paper that he put in a hat.  I picked my piece of paper out of the hat.  It literally read, “How we got the devil.”  I was shocked.  I thought, “What kind of subject matter is this?”  I wanted to trade with my classmates, but no one wanted to touch that subject.  It reminded me of being a kid and wanting to trade my sardine sandwich for peanut butter and jelly.  It wasn’t going to happen!

I began my paper, and looked for a copy of the Jewish Scriptures at the store.  All I could find was a Bible with both the Old & New Testaments, and I was not paying ­­­for a New Testament.  I went to the Library and got my paper done as quickly as I could.  I tried to avoid dealing directly with this subject, and did not get the best grade on my paper, but that’s a subject for another day.

Then, one day, an organization called “The Gideon,” were on our campus handing out little green New Testaments with Psalms and Proverbs.  A nice man offered one to me.  I rejected it and said some not nice things to this man.  I was irritated because I did not understand why these people felt it necessary to force their beliefs on me.  In actuality, they were not forcing their beliefs on me.  I just wanted them to keep their beliefs to themselves. Anyone trying to share about Jesus, in my opinion, was “forcing” me to listen to something with which I disagreed heartily.

I went to class after my interaction with this Gideon.  I could not stop thinking about the Bible I turned down.  I decided to go to a different Gideon and get one.  I took the Bible and began to read it.  I was amazed at just how Jewish this book was.  It was so different than what I thought it would be. And I began to question why we, as Jewish people, didn’t believe in Jesus.

Then, a speaker named Josh McDowell came to speak at the campus. A former atheist, his goal in life had been to disprove Christianity, and in the process, he became a believer in Jesus.  I decided to go hear him. As he presented the evidence for the resurrection, I found myself also believing that Jesus was the Jewish Messiah.  I realized that it would have taken more faith for me to not believe it was true than to believe it was true.

A few nights later, I asked Janice many questions about Jesus and God. Even though deep down, I knew the truth, it was a struggle for me to even say the name of Jesus—I’d known it only as a swear word. After another few hours of conversation with Janice, and after a huge struggle, I prayed to receive Jesus as my Messiah.  This happened in the early hours of the morning.

After I prayed, I just wanted to go to sleep.  I tried to sleep, but couldn’t! I felt a warm sensation like nothing I’d ever experienced before. Finally, I fell asleep. I awoke about three hours later. I sat at the edge of my bed. I felt different. There was love, peace and joy that had not been there the day before. I knew at that moment that God was real and that something remarkable had just happened in my life.  It was as if I put on glasses for the first time and saw everything more clearly.

That morning, I walked on campus and actually felt like hugging people as they walked by! Clearly, I was not myself since I am not the type to hug strangers.  I walked into my flute professor’s studio and had my lesson. She remarked that there was something different about me. I told her what had happened the night before.  She was very happy for me and understood why I seemed different.

Three weeks later, my dad came to pick me up from college and bring me home for the summer. I was so excited about my new faith that I probably didn’t have much tact as I announced that Jesus was the Jewish Messiah. Our three-hour ride back to Kansas City was a quiet one. When we got home, I told my mother.  The rest of the summer was filled with tension as my parents had to grapple with my decision.  I can certainly understand why they felt the way they did.  I never wanted to hurt them.  Yet, I knew the truth and couldn’t deny it.

During Christmas vacation, we visited my grandparents in Florida. While swimming at the beach, I was stung by a man-of-war. Being allergic to bee-stings also meant that my body was not going to react well to this.  That sting nearly took my life. My parents decided they (in my father’s words), “would rather have me alive as a Christian than dead as a Jew.”

However, I never stopped being Jewish. After all, if Jesus, Yeshua, is the Jewish Messiah, what could be more Jewish than to believe in Him?

We have had our ups and downs since then, but today my parents and I enjoy a great, loving relationship.  They had aspirations for me—I could have been a doctor, a lawyer… who knows, maybe a world famous flute player (and yes, I still play the flute, but am not world-famous). But the thing is, God also had aspirations for me. He wanted me to know him; to know the joy and peace that only a relationship with him can bring. And that relationship comes through knowing the Messiah, Yeshua.

Have you been wondering lately if your aspirations for yourself, or maybe other people’s aspirations for you, are not really enough? God’s aspiration for you is to know His Messiah, Yeshua, so that you can have a reconciled relationship with God and enjoy him forever.

If you aspire to know God, you’ll have to accept the relationship on his terms, whatever they may be. Whether you are Jewish or not, why not ask God to show you the truth about Jesus?

God

1. We believe in one God, Creator of all things, holy, infinitely perfect, and eternally existing in a loving unity of three equally divine Persons: the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. Having limitless knowledge and sovereign power, God has graciously purposed from eternity to redeem a people for Himself and to make all things new for His own glory.

The Bible

2. We believe that God has spoken in the Scriptures, both Old and New Testaments, through the words of human authors. As the verbally inspired Word of God, the Bible is without error in the original writings, the complete revelation of His will for salvation, and the ultimate authority by which every realm of human knowledge and endeavor should be judged. Therefore, it is to be believed in all that it teaches, obeyed in all that it requires, and trusted in all that it promises.

The Human Condition

3. We believe that God created Adam and Eve in His image, but they sinned when tempted by Satan. In union with Adam, human beings are sinners by nature and by choice, alienated from God, and under His wrath. Only through God’s saving work in Jesus (Yeshua) the Messiah can we be rescued, reconciled and renewed.

Jesus (Yeshua) the Messiah

4. We believe that Jesus (Yeshua) the Messiah is God incarnate, fully God and fully man, one Person in two natures. Jesus—Israel's promised Messiah—was conceived through the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary. He lived a sinless life, was crucified under Pontius Pilate, arose bodily from the dead, ascended into heaven and sits at the right hand of God the Father as our High Priest and Advocate.

The Work of Messiah

5. We believe that Jesus (Yeshua) the Messiah, as our representative and substitute, shed His blood on the cross(tree) as the perfect, all-sufficient sacrifice for our sins. His atoning death and victorious resurrection constitute the only ground for salvation.

The Holy Spirit

6. We believe that the Holy Spirit (Ruach HaKodesh), in all that He does, glorifies the Lord Jesus (Yeshua) the Messiah. He convicts the world of its guilt. He regenerates sinners, and in Him they are baptized into union with Messiah and adopted as heirs in the family of God. He also indwells, illuminates, guides, equips and empowers believers for Messiah-like living and service.

The Body of Messiah

7. We believe that the body of Messiah is comprised of both Jews and Gentiles who have been justified by God's grace through faith alone in Messiah alone. They are united by the Holy Spirit in the body of Messiah, of which He is the Head. The body of Messiah is manifest in local churches and messianic congregations, whose membership should be composed only of believers. Jesus (Yeshua) mandated two ordinances, baptism and the Lord’s Supper (communion), which visibly and tangibly express the gospel. Though they are not the means of salvation, when celebrated by believers in Messiah in genuine faith, these ordinances confirm and nourish the believer.

Living as a Believer

8. We believe that God's justifying grace must not be separated from His sanctifying power and purpose. God commands us to love Him supremely and others sacrificially, and to live out our faith by sharing God’s word with others, caring for others, and having compassion toward the poor and oppressed. With God’s Word, the Spirit’s power, and fervent prayer in Messiah’s name, we are to combat the spiritual forces of evil. In obedience to Messiah’s commission, we are to make disciples among all people, always bearing witness to the gospel in word and deed.

Messiah’s Return

9. We believe in the personal, bodily and glorious return of Jesus the Messiah. The coming of Messiah, at a time known only to God, demands constant expectancy and, as our blessed hope, motivates the believer to godly living, sacrificial service and energetic mission.

Response and Eternal Destiny

10. We believe that God commands everyone everywhere to believe the gospel by turning to Him in repentance and receiving the Lord Jesus (Yeshua) the Messiah. We believe that God will raise the dead bodily and judge the world, assigning the unbeliever to condemnation and eternal conscious punishment and the believer to eternal blessedness and joy with the Lord in the new heaven and the new earth, to the praise of His glorious grace. Amen.

Israel

11.  We believe God chose the Jewish people to be a light to the nations.  He made an everlasting and irrevocable covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, which He will fulfill.   We believe God still has a plan for the nation of Israel.  We believe that in light of Romans 1:16, there is a priority to share the Gospel with Jewish people, along with all people.