INTERVIEW
		
		J.D. Hill: Catch the Vision
		
		By Audra Smith
                	The 700 Club
                	
		
		
		Original Air Date: November 19, 2010
		
		 
		CBN.com 
			 Among all of the memorable playmakers in  the NFL, J.D. Hill was a football legend. He was a force to be reckoned with on  the field, but few truly knew the driving force behind the man.
        “As long as I was on the ball field, running  and catching and jumping, that was my world," J.D. Hill tells The 700 Club. "I could forget about being an  adopted kid. I could forget about my parents being drug addicts and alcoholics.  Athletics became a very important part of my life. I could hide in there.”
        When J.D.  was only three days old, his drug  addicted parents left him with his grandparents.
        “It created a lot of emotional pain,  because I always questioned, ‘Why didn’t my parents want me?’” 
        But even in the absence of his birth  parents, J.D.’s grandparents tried to give him the foundation he needed to  succeed. 
        “My grandparents loved the Lord. Because I  was raised in the church, I knew about the Lord. I loved God, but not like I  loved sports.”  
        In high school, J.D. was one of the fastest  track runners in the country and an all American baseball and football player.  He earned an athletic scholarship to Arizona  State where he lettered in all three sports  and set NCAA records that stand to  this day.
        “I was the athlete. That was my identity.”
        In 1971, J.D. was a first round draft pick by  the Buffalo Bills.
        “I can remember in pre-season, my first year  with the Buffalo Bills, I caught a 67-yard touchdown, first pass to me. The  next one was a 69-yard touchdown, and I was like, ‘I am on my way. I  am going to be this all pro rookie of the year.’”
        However, J.D.’s victory celebration was short  lived. After the game, he received a  stunning blow.
        “Head coach and one  of the vice presidents said, ‘We have some bad news. Your mother  has passed away.’ All I want to be able to say was, ‘Hey, mom, I’m  your kid. I’m your kid.’ But, I never got a chance.”
        After the funeral, J.D. immediately flew home  for a pre-season game against the Detroit Lions.
        “I remember I didn’t want to play. I hadn’t  practiced all week. I was tired.   Emotionally, I wasn’t there. I remember catching a pass and going across  the middle and I caught a slant.  Dick  Labo hit me in my left knee, and I felt something.  I thought, ‘Man, that doesn’t feel  right.’  I didn’t get a chance to tell the  trainer or anybody that something was wrong with my knee.  I go out and sure enough the ball was kicked  to me."
        On the next tackle, his knee was hit again  and he was carried off of the field on a stretcher. But, he fought hard to come  back from arthroscopic knee surgery, and was able to return to the Bills by the  last game of the season.
        He went on to  play five seasons with the Bills and even competed in the NFL pro-bowl as a wide  receiver. In 1979, he was traded to the Detroit Lions, but he wouldn’t be in  Detroit for long.
        “I get to Detroit  and the first game of the season, I get hit in the knee, tore up the knee. I  play one game. I catch one pass in two years and I never recovered from that.  So, I was let go by the Detroit Lions. And  that devastated me. I went to  drugs.  I went to alcohol.  I walked the streets. I ended up in  bars.  I ended up in drug houses.  So that became my life."
        J.D. became  addicted to crack cocaine and spent years going in and out of rehab facilities. 
        Eventually, he  left his three sons and his wife of 20 years.
        “I lost everything  except my life at one point.”
        J.D. fed his  addiction for almost 10 years  until, at a crack house, he realized he had  reached his breaking point.  
        “I was so bad on  drugs that I knew I was dying.  I said to the Lord, ‘Lord, if You  don’t get me out, I’m not going to make it.”
        At the same time,  his wife and his best friends were already making arrangements to find J.D. and  get him help.  
        “Larry Churcheck  called my wife, praying with her and encouraging her. He said, ‘Listen, do you  think we could get him to the Dream Center?’ The same day that Larry was  talking to my wife, another friend of mine, my best friend named Alvin Battle,  got two other friends and came into the drug community looking for me.
        “Alvin  came in the yard, went through the drug dealers, through the  drug addicts, came in the house and called me out by name. It was as though  Jesus was calling, ‘Lazarus.’ He said, ‘J.D.!’    I knew his voice.  God called  him to come in that drug house and get me out.  I haven’t been back since.”
        J.D. entered  the L.A. Dream Center and successfully finished a one-year program. Almost a  decade later, J.D. is still clean and his life has been fully restored.
        “While there, God gave me back my first love,  which is Him. It drew me back to Him. God restored me back to my family. He gave  me back my wife and children. He placed me in a loving community, and it is  because of my love for my Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ and the call He has on  my life.”
        Today, JD. is a  counselor at the Dream Center where he often shares his own story. He has  started his own ministry, Catch the Vision, which reaches out to thousands of  young athletes around the globe.
        “When  I left the NFL, I thought it was over. This ball has given me a  platform to give me an opportunity to do even greater things than I ever  thought I would do.  I made a lot of  great receptions. As a receiver I caught a lot of great passes. The greatest reception I ever made was when I caught the  vision to allow Jesus Christ to come into my life, and be Lord and Savior.  Greatest reception I ever made.”      
	  
		
CBN IS HERE FOR YOU!
	Are you seeking answers in life? Are you hurting? 
	Are you facing a difficult situation? 
 A caring friend will be there to pray with you in your time of need.