Preface: I lived in Schenectady, New York for a couple of weeks in '69. We ended up attending Schoharie valley school after we moved to a farm in upper state New York. I attended a scout camp there on a lake where I carved my and my girl friend's initials in a heart in a number of the pine trees in that forest. cv & vj (It must have been poorly planned to have had all that wasted time on my hands.) We drove past dentist Irving Cohen's house on a main thoroughfare between towns. Dad would point it out every time and say that there was a famous jew who had converted to mormon.
http://www.testimonies.20m.com/A%20Jew%20Finds%20The%20True%20Messiah.htm [this was not my original source]vj
So now, 7/2015 my friend Bob Davis is dating his divorced daughter. She is a famous hairdresser named Emily. Her daughter is marrying in Florida this fall.
This story is totally awesome. But Bob reassures me he had a very dark side. Perhaps that dark side was the practice my father promulgated.
I love this story. I would love it to be totally true!
B'nai
Shalom officer 1980s to 1998
Born
an orthodox Jew, Irving Cohen was converted to the gospel with the
help of a fellow officer while serving with the armed forces in
Korea. This involved his making a radical change in the attitudes and
understandings that were a part of his traditional background.
Both
as stake missionary and high councilor he continued to bear a fervent
testimony on all possible occasions and this has resulted in many
other conversions to the gospel.
A
dentist by profession, Dr. Cohen lived in Schenectady, New York.
He
authored "Jews of the Torah" in 1967, and "The authors
of Genesis as explained by the Colophon System Hardcover" in
1966. Below is his moving story of how he found the true Jewish
Messiah in the person of Jesus Christ, and of some of the trials and
joys this discovery brought him.We have an MP3 of Irvine Cohen's
voice recording this testimony.
Audio
(MP3) of Irving Cohen Testimony
Irving
Cohen Testimony - Text
In
the Words of Irving Cohen:
I
was born into an orthodox Jewish family in Brooklyn, New York. [2002]
My parents had five children. I was their third child and first son.
Like so many of the Jewish boys at the time, I attended Hebrew school
and was prepared for my bar-mitzvahthe ceremony held for a Jewish boy
when he reaches the age of thirteen and is considered a man by the
Jewish community and he can then stand before the congregation and
say certain prayers.
Right
after my bar-mitzvah, as I continued to have my Hebrew lessons, I
asked my rabbi: "Why is it that the Jewish people haven't had a
prophet for two thousand five hundred years? I don't expect a hundred
prophets, maybe not even ten prophets. But I do expect one prophet.
Surely there must be one Jew somewhere who is worthy to be a 'nauvey'
(prophet)!"
My
rabbi could only shrug his shoulders at the question. I then took the
problem to my wonderful father and he, too, could not answer the
question. All the evidence for the fact that there would be no more
prophets referred to the words of a Psalm (22:1): "Eli, Eli."
"Eli, Eli" has the ring and cry of how the Jewish people
have fallen away from God's graces and how they have been persecuted,
burned, and spat upon throughout the ages, and how they yearn to be
back again as God's chosen people.
I
entered college a few years after my bar-mitzvah, and one of my
classes was a course in philosophy. All term long we argued, "Is
there or isn't there a God?" At the end of the term, each person
in the class was required to write a thesis. My thesis was that God
once lived but had died. I reasoned in this way: Supposing a great
architect constructs a building. The building stands five hundred
years, but the man who created it, the architect, dies at the age of
one hundred. Somebody else comes along two hundred years later and
discovers the building. In studying it he realizes that it took an
intelligence to create the building. Similarly, I realized that it
took an intelligence to create the world. But since the Jewish people
haven't had a prophet for two thousand five hundred years and the
Christian people basically can't claim a prophet for almost two
thousand years, and since the world is in a horrible condition, the
God who created this world must have gone off and died. I was sure
that if he still had control over it, he wouldn't let it be in its
present state.
So
much for my philosophy! But as the years went by I tried, at least,
to do the right thing by my fellowmen.
In
the course of time I became a dentist. In 1953 I received a call to
serve my country and I complied gladly. I was made acting company
commander for one hundred dentists at Fort Sam Houston. My platoon
leader, a dentist from Phoenix, Arizona, named Junius Gibbons, was
somehow different from anybody else around him. Here were ninety-nine
other dentists, and this one young dentist stood out head and
shoulders above the rest. Not that he was taller; but his character
shone forth. I said to myself, "This guy is different, and I
want to get to know him so I can see what makes him tick." Later
on he told me that he had had similar thoughts about me and had
watched for the opportunity to approach me.
One
day we were waiting to be interviewed by the commanding general, and
Dr. Gibbons said to me, "Captain, what religion do you profess?"
I
said, "I don't profess any religion; however, I am not ashamed
to say that I am of Jewish background. But I don't believe in
Judaism. I have searched Christianity and I don't believe in
Christianity eithernot the Christianity that I've found. I have also
studied the other religions of the world, and I have come to the
conclusion that religion is a man-made situation. If I'm going to be
religious, it is not going to be in a man-made religion. I want to
find God and worship in his religion, if there be such a thing."
He
took me by the hand and said, "I'm a fellow Israelite."
I
said, "You mean you're a Jew?"
He
said, "No, no. If you are a Jew, you are probably of the tribe
of Judah, and I'm of the tribe of Joseph. These are two tribes within
the House of Israel." He continued to pump my hand.
He
stunned me by that remark. I went home, and I said, "You know, I
met a fellow who claims he is of the house of Israel, and he is not
Jewish. How do you account for that?"
"Oh,
don't pay any attention to him," was the reply. "Everybody
is trying to get into the act!"
But
I asked myself right then and there: "Does Gibbons know
something that I don't know?"
Junius
Gibbons and I were among those assigned to the Far East theater of
operations, the Korean conflict, and we met next at Ft. Lewis,
Washington. I saw him at breakfast. We were confined to the base,
because we were leaving within twenty-four hours.
I
said to him, "I'd like to hear more about what you have to say
about the Israelites, the Jews, and the tribe of Joseph."
He
was very anxious to help me. He said, "Fine. After breakfast
let's find a little quiet place where we'll have some privacy, and
we'll go over some of the Bible."
After
we found our spot, Dr. Gibbons told me, among other things, that he
had another book, similar to the Bible, called the Book of Mormon,
and that he believed that book to be scripture also. And he told me a
little about the origin of the book.
I
said, "You mean to tell me that you had a prophet by the name of
Joseph Smith, and he had the courage, the temerity, and the audacity
to write these things in a book?"
"Joseph
Smith didn't write them, he only translated them," he replied.
"But here's the book."
I
said, "You know, I'd like to have a copy of that book."
"I'll
give it to you on one condition"
"Okay,"
I said, and I reached for my wallet.
"No,
no. That's not the condition," my friend Gibbons said, handing
me the book. "Just promise me you'll read it."
I
made the promise. By this time it must have been about one o'clock in
the morning. My plane took off about 3 a.m., so I said goodbye to Dr.
Gibbons and, taking his book, I went off for Japan on the way to
Korea.
When
I arrived in Korea, I didn't feel that I wanted to do what the other
officers were doinggambling, drinking, carousing. I had this book,
the Book of Mormon. Reading it was worthwhile to me, but I was not
about to believe that it came from the source it claimed. I thought I
could disprove it by finding obvious errors, so I spent my time
reading.
As
I read the Book of Mormon from cover to cover, there were parts that
I didn't absorb too much. I decided I'd better compare it with the
Bible, so I asked one of my chaplain friends for a Bible, which he
gave to me.
Now
I read through the Old and New Testaments for the first time in my
adult life. I was looking for errors, for contradictions between the
Bible and the Book of Mormon. I couldn't find any the first time
through, so I knew I'd just have to try harder. I read the Book of
Mormon for the second time, and this time I began to understand a
little more about what was going on. Then I decided I had better read
the Bible through again, and this I did, [p.60] from cover to cover,
for the second time. And then I went back to the Book of Mormon for a
third time, and within the last chapter I read this:
Behold,
I would exhort you that when ye shall read these things, if it be
wisdom in God that you should read them, that ye would remember how
merciful the Lord has been unto the children of men, from the
creation of Adam even down unto the time that you shall receive these
things, and ponder it in your hearts.
And
when ye shall receive these things, I would exhort you that ye would
ask God, the Eternal Father, in the name of Christ, if these things
are not true; and if ye shall ask with a sincere heart, with real
intent, having faith in Christ, he will manifest the truth of it unto
you, by the power of the Holy Ghost.
And
by the power of the Holy Ghost ye may know the truth of all things.
(Moroni 10:3-5)
Obviously
that is written for a Christian. Here I am, Jewish. So I would like
to reword verses 4 and 5 for my Jewish readers.
"And
when ye shall receive these things, I would exhort you that you would
ask God, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, in the name of the
Messiah, if these things are not true; and if ye shall ask with a
sincere heart, with real intent, having faith in the Messiah, he will
manifest the truth of it unto you, by the power of the Ruach Elohim
(literally translated, 'the Spirit of God,' and in Christian
terminology, 'the Holy Ghost'). And by the power of the Ruach Elohim
(or the Spirit of God, or the Holy Ghost) you may know the truth of
all things."
This
hit me, and I said, "If this is a book of God, then Irving Cohen
is entitled to a revelation." But I had two problems.
Problem
No. 1: The book said I had to ask in the name of Jesus Christ, and I
didn't know whether or not Jesus Christ was the Messiah.
Problem
No. 2: I could say a prayer for bread, a prayer for food, but there
was no prayer in Hebrew covering the Book of Mormon. I was stuck!
At
this time I was the regimental dental surgeon. My regiment had been
moved down to the Isle of Koji where we were [p.61] guarding the
prisoners picked up on the 38th parallel. For some reason a great
many operations were coming up and I didn't have enough supplies. I
went to my colonel, and I said, "I need supplies desperately. I
have a friend over in Pusan (on the southernmost tip of Korea), and
if you will give me a three-day pass, I will get my supplies."
He granted me permission for a three-day leave.
At
Pusan, I went to see my friend, Junius Gibbons. He gave me my
supplies and asked me, "By the way, did you keep your promise?"
"Yes,
I did," I replied proudly. "I read it three times, not
once." And then I told him about my two problems.
He
said, "All right, Irving, I'll tell you what we'll do. Let's go
through the Old Testament, the book of your people, and cover all of
the prophecies concerning the coming of the Messiah, and then see
where we go from there."
The
Old Testament is a record of my ancestors, and the Jews still believe
in the coming of the Messiah, so I agreed. We began with Deuteronomy
chapter 8, verses 15 and 18; then we read from the Prophets, and
finally we came to the 53rd chapter of Isaiah. I am going to change
some of the words here again; I'm not going to take any of them out,
but I am going to add a few words for clarity. Since the Old
Testament is the book of the Jews, wherever it says "we" or
"us," it means the Jews; wherever it reads "he"
or "him," it refers to the Messiah.
"Who
hath believed our report? and to whom is the arm of the Lord
revealed? For he [the Messiah] shall grow up before him as a tender
plant, and as a root out of a dry ground: he [the Messiah] hath no
form nor comeliness; and when we [the Jews] shall see him, there is
no beauty that we [the Jews] should desire him.
"He
[the Messiah] is despised and rejected of men; a man of sorrows, and
acquainted with grief; and we [the Jews] hid as it were our faces
from him; he [the Messiah] was despised, and we [the Jews] esteemed
him not.
"Surely
he [the Messiah] hath borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows: yet
we [the Jews] did esteem him stricken, smitten of God, and afflicted.
"But
he [the Messiah] was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised
for our iniquities: the chastisement of our peace was upon him; and
with his stripes we [the Jews] are healed.
"All
we [the Jews] like sheep have gone astray; we [the Jews] have turned
every one to his own way; and the Lord hath laid on him [the Messiah]
the iniquity of us all.
"He
[the Messiah] was oppressed, and he was afflicted, yet he opened not
his mouth: he [the Messiah] is brought as a lamb to the slaughter,
and as a sheep before her shearers is dumb, so he [the Messiah]
openeth not his mouth.
"He
[the Messiah] was taken from prison and from judgment: and who shall
declare his generation? for he [the Messiah] was cut off out of the
land of the living: for the transgression of my people [the Jews] was
he stricken." (Isaiah 53:1-8)
As
we arrived at about this point in the Old Testament, it seemed to me
that a brilliant light started to come into the room where we were. I
am not able to explain how it happened; all I know is that it did
happen. And with this light came the Ruach Elohim, or the Spirit of
God. Something leaped inside of me, causing me to jump up, and I
shouted to my friend, Junius, "I've got it! I've got it!"
He
asked, "What have you got?"
"I
know now that Jesus is the Messiah!"
I
found myself sobbing with joy and relief, and, for a few minutes we
were silent. My mind raced. "Why do the Jews not believe in
Jesus as the Messiah?" I asked myself. Because they are taught
this idea by their parents. Were their parents there at the time? No.
How did they know what was right and what was wrong? They failed to
believe because they were also taught not to believe. Were their
grandparents there? No.
But
because somebody made a mistake two thousand years ago, do I have to
close my eyes and make the same mistake? In college I had always been
taught to recognize truth. My parents had always taught me to be
truthful and to defend truth. If God reveals to me that Jesus is the
Messiah, am I supposed to close my eyes and go along the wrong path
just to be agreeable with my mistaken ancestors? NO!
In
New Testament times the original followers of Christ were all Jews.
They could be compared to the radical element, while those who did
not believe in Jesus as the Messiah remained the [p.63]
conservatives. As the years went by, those who accepted Christ became
known by the new name, "Christians." The conservatives kept
the old identification, Jews. But both of these groups had originally
been Jews. And if one of my "Conservative" ancestors two
thousand years ago could not believe that Jesus was the Messiah, then
do all of his descendants have to follow that same tradition? Suppose
Jesus is the Messiah. The question is, are we, the Jews of this
generation, going to be big enough to accept him?
The
Jewish people have an expression which they use in the synagogue:
"Vawohovtah adonoi eloechchaw, becall levovchaw, vebecall
nafshechaw, becall moadechaw," which in English means: "Love
the Lord with all thy heart, with all thy might, with all thy mind,
and with all thy soul."
Now
that I knew that Jesus was the Messiah, I did love him with all my
heart and soul, and with this love, the Ruach Elohim bore testimony
to me (and still does) that indeed the Messiah is Jesus Christ. But I
still didn't know how to pray. So Junius said to me, "If you
want to pray, you begin by getting down on your knees."
"Just
a minute. I'm a Jew, and Jews never get on their knees, not even on
the Day of Atonement."
"But,"
he said, "if it's good enough for a prophet, it's good enough
for Irving Cohen. Right? The Old Testament tells us that Daniel
'kneeled upon his kneesand prayed, and gave thanks before his God,'
even after King Darius had decreed that anyone who did so would be
cast into a den of lions." (Daniel 6:10.)
And
I agreed that if it were good enough for a prophet, it should be good
enough for Irving Cohen. So Irving Cohen got down on his knees.
Then
Junius said, "And when you pray, address the one to whom you are
praying; after all, God is your Father."
The
Jewish people pray "Auvenu Malkaynu," a chant meaning "Our
Father, our King." "God is our Father," I thought,
"and what righteous father doesn't want to hear his child talk
to him directly?"
Junius
said, "You address your Father in heaven." And then he
taught me somethingsomething I had never known before. He said, "You
have to thank God for what you already have, because unless you
appreciate what you already have, why should God give you anything
more? See, he'd be spoiling you." (A wise parent doesn't want to
spoil his child.)
It
was at that time that I started to appreciate my blessings, which I
had never done so fully before; I had not been properly aware of
them. Junius said, "If you appreciate your blessings, you are in
a position to ask for more, as long as it is done in righteousness.
So then you ask whether or not this Book of Mormon is true; and then
do it in the name of Jesus, the Messiah, Amen."
I
said good night to my buddy, went into my own room, and then for the
first time in my lifealone, by myselfI went down on my knees, and I
made a prayer something like this: "Oh God, the God of Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob, forgive me for not knowing better in my youth. I am
only interested in doing the right thing now. I don't want a man-made
religion. I want a God-made religion. So I'll make you a proposition:
If you will show me that this Book of Mormon is true and that the
Mormon religion is your religion upon the earth, I'll take every
opportunity to teach this to others. On the other hand, if this Book
of Mormon is a false book, and you reveal this to me, I'll expose
these Mormons as a bunch of frauds up and down the earth. And I say
this in the name of Jesus, my Messiah. Amen."
I
don't just believe the Book of Mormon is true; I know it. It was
shown to me that night that God lives; that Jesus is the Messiah;
that there are entities called angels; that there are prophets upon
the earth restored to the house of Israelnot just to the Jews, but to
the rest of the tribes of Israel as well.
The
Book of Mormon, from the tribe of Joseph, is another record equal to
the Bible, which is from the tribe of Judah. Now I understood what
Ezekiel meant when he wrote:
The
word of the Lord came unto me again, saying, Moreover, thou son of
man, take thee one stick, and write upon it, For Judah, and for the
children of Israel his companions: then take another stick [p.65] and
write upon it, For Joseph, the stick of Ephraim, and for all the
house of Israel his companions; And join them one to another into one
stick; and they shall become one in thine hand. (Ezekiel 37:15-17)
In
Ezekiel's days they didn't have books. Instead they took a piece of
parchment, wrote on it, and wrapped it around a stick, and this they
called a "stick." The stick of Judah which Ezekiel mentions
is the Bible, written principally by Jews, descendants of Judah the
son of Jacob. The stick of Joseph is the Book of Mormon, written by
descendants of Judah's brother, Joseph, in America.
As
soon as I knew the Book of Mormon to be truly a book of God, I
immediately knew that there were troubled days ahead. Nevertheless, I
had to keep my promise. That meant joining The Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints and devoting my life to telling others about the
gospel.
Upon
being released from the service, I finally returned to my home in
Brooklyn, New York, where my Jewish wife gave me an ultimatum:
"Either give up your Christian Mormon nonsense, or give me a
divorce."
I
didn't want my wife to divorce me, and I didn't want to lose my
infant daughter. I also did not want to go contrary to God's will. I
realized that I was in a real dilemma. What was I to do?
Then
the thought came that I should follow the same pattern that I had
learned. "Ask and it shall be given." I went to my knees
and asked Heavenly Father what to do. I needed guidance. As I was
thus in prayer, it seemed that a distinct voice began to speak to me,
and with it came the power of the Ruach Elohim or Holy Ghost.
I
immediately picked up a pencil and began to write that which I heard.
It is recorded as follows:
"My
son, when I created this earth and put the human family upon it, I
did so upon the principle of free agency. Therefore, if your wife
insists upon exercising her right to do so, don't attempt to prevent
her. However, let the record show that she obtained the divorce.
"Further,
whatever you give up in my behalf I will return it upon your head,
seven-fold. Since you will lose your little girl, the future will
return seven for one.
"I,
the Lord God, further promise you, that upon reaching the age of
maturity, your daughter will leave her mother and come and join her
father."
Well,
the years passed, and during that time my Jewish wife did obtain the
divorce, and I remarried. This new union has now produced the seven
children which were promised plus one more. And after sixteen and
one-half years of separation, my daughter came to me in July, 1970.
I
bear my testimony that the Book of Mormon is true, that God lives,
and that he will answer the prayers of anyone, provided that that
person wants to do his will-not seventy per cent of his will, not
eighty per cent of his will, not even ninety per cent of his will,
but one hundred per cent of his will. This is the prerequisite for us
as it was for Moses. If you are willing to do his will one hundred
per cent, you are entitled to receive an answer to your prayers, just
as I did and still do. For this I am humbly grateful. This testimony
I bear in the name of Jesus, your Messiah and my Messiah. Amen.
B'nai
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