Celebrating 50 Years of Continuous Publication
Friday, 10 September 2010
Quote of the Day

Trust in the Lord with all thine heart, and lean not unto thine own understanding. In all ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct thy paths.

Proverbs 3:5-6
Slave to Crime

  Steve CattellSteve Cattell was a career criminal. Dubbed Britain’s most prolific burglar, he spent 24 years behind bars before making a life-changing decision. He became a Christian. Here he tells his story of hope.

I was born into a life without love. I felt unwanted by my parents and rejected by my brothers. I felt hurt and angry. As I grew up I felt more anger and more hate. Crime became my release. Through crime I discovered a high I couldn’t get anywhere else. I was ten years old when I was first locked in a cell. It marked the start of a total of twenty four years in prison.

Surviving inside meant becoming immune to everyone and everything. I would fight at every opportunity: other inmates, prison officers, the system that kept me from my beloved crime. At night in the isolation unit I would scream and pray to the devil to give me enough anger to see me through until the next night. I didn’t care about anyone.Unbreakable (book)

I became an armed robber, a drug dealer, and Britain’s most prolific burglar: breaking into eight thousand homes a year. I’d marry and get my wife pregnant just to reduce my sentence. I’d rob my children of their father, my wife of her husband, and I didn’t care.

I had once done some jobs with a heroin addict and he started talking to me about God. He’d managed to come off drugs and he’d gone straight. He said it was down to Jesus Christ. I thought he was mad, and I told him so, but he wouldn’t leave me alone. He was constantly ringing me and praying for me and talking about a new way of life, a life of truth and hope. He said that the truth would set me free.

I saw freedom in terms of either being in a cell or not. I didn’t realise that I was just as much a prisoner outside the prison walls as inside. I was a slave to crime. I had sentences hanging over me. He kept on ringing. I was desperate. I started to question whether there was any truth in God. It didn’t make sense. If he was real, where was he when I was growing up? And, if he knew my past how could he love me? How could he forgive me for the things I’d done?

Things began to change. I began to feel love for my wife and family I’d treated so badly. I found myself confessing to the police. I lost the desire to burgle and to hurt. I even started to trust again, in God. I began to understand that in Christ I was a new creation. It’s been a steep learning curve. I’ve discovered that some Christians are suspicious of ex-convicts. I felt God calling me to reach out to people but there were so many barriers. I missed a lot of education being in and out of institutions, and churches and prisons sometimes mistrusted me. But I learned that God is in control.

I now talk in prisons, colleges and churches. I have been interviewed for newspapers, radio and television. I even work with the police! With people this would be impossible, but not with God. My God is a God who opens doors. He is my dad. I truSteve Cattellst him in everything.

 
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