ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK: 40 YEARS BELOW ZERO, Part 5
January
1, 2016
Happy New Year, Folks! 2016 promises to be the most
spectacular year we’ve ever had! For those who are walking in intimate
union with the Lord Jesus Christ, they will see the realm of the “miraculous”
(the real normal) unfold in dimensions never experienced by this
generation. “Phillip Transportation” will become more and more
common. Mass healings and mass deliverances will be more and more in
evidence. The Glory of the Lord will be on display as never before!
The feast table depicted in the artist’s rendition from Glory of
Zion (shown above) is exactly how I see 2016 for committed, sold-out
believers. On the other hand, it promises to be a traumatic year for
folks who live their lives in fear, doubt and unbelief. The provision of
the Lord for His people is beyond description, and we need to take advantage of
that provision to move this last great Harvest along.
There is no question that the Lord wants a full table for the
feast He has set before us. Let’s do our part, folks!
One of the areas that we need to exercise ourselves in as sons
and daughters of God is the realm of authority – the authority that we have in
speaking. We need to be speaking to our situations, speaking to work
environments, speaking to the various levels of government and bringing Kingdom
authority in each situation. We need to KNOW what it means to declare and
decree peace in the midst of chaos and the rulership of the Lord Jesus Christ
in our governments.
For those of you who enjoyed and participated in the fireworks
displays for this new year, it brings to mind for me some of my own experiences
from the past.
When
we were living in Nome and I was just a young tyke, we went out to Anvil
Mountain for the 4th of July holiday and took some fireworks with us. It
was perhaps my first or second experience of lighting fireworks. We had
"sizzlers" and "ladyfingers." We had "Roman
Candles" and "Chinese Rockets." All of that was OK, but it
was the "Cherry Bombs" that interested me.
You
know what they are, right? 'Bout an inch or so in diameter, maybe two
inches long -- give or take -- and they pack a pretty good amount of
powder. In those days it was fun to set a Cherry Bomb under a pile of
rocks, or make some kind of makeshift "house" out of driftwood or
rocks, branches and turf, and blow it up. My brother and I went to a lot
of trouble one day to build this "house" in preparation for blowing
it up.
I
lit the fuse on the Cherry Bomb and waited. Nothing. Two or three
minutes went by. Still nothing. I shrugged my shoulders and decided
I had a dud. My Dad warned me that sometimes the fuses get wet or damp,
and don't burn as fast, and that I ought to just leave it alone.
Nawwww.... Huhh Uhhh. I wanted the "bang," and decided
I'd yank the "dud" and put another in its place.
Right.
I pulled the "dud," clenched it in my left hand while I put another
in its place and lit it. Maybe ten or fifteen feet from the
"house," the so-called "dud" suddenly blew up.
Whether it was the way I had clenched the Cherry Bomb, or just the Grace of God,
all it did was blow my hand open and leave my palm and fingers absolutely black
from the powder. There was a slight surface burn, but nothing to speak
of.
The
shock of the Cherry Bomb exploding in my hand left me standing there
dazed. My folks rushed over to see if I was OK when the second Cherry
Bomb suddenly blew and showered us all with bits of rock, wood and dirt from
our little "house." Duhhhhh. I decided I'd had enough
adventure for the time with firecrackers, and it was a couple years before I
asked my father to buy them again.
Funny
thing, though. Part of my military training was with the 7th Special
Forces, learning the art or science of demolitions. The difference was
that we were using shaped charges made from C-3 or C-4 and blowing up icebergs
(part of our training exercises in the arctic, you know) as big as
tankers. Must be something about the thrill of things going "bang,"
I guess. I dunno. Maybe that first explosion did something to
me. You think? Oh well! 'Nuff of that.
Coffee's
on, folks! The French Press is steeping and steaming. Got some of
that really dark roasted Columbian today. Goooooooodd Stuff!
Mary
Mendenhall was a Yupik Eskimo who had moved to Nome in 1948 seeking medical
treatment. By the time we became aware of her condition, the medical
society had given her up for dead. With a prognosis of perhaps two or
three weeks to live, she was dying of tuberculosis, her lungs literally eaten
away. (My memory says she had cancer as well, but don't quote me on
that.)
The
first time I walked into her house with my father, she was barely conscious and
scarcely aware that we were there. At age six, I knew that healing was
part of the package that Jesus provided, and I'd certainly read in the Gospels
about all of the healing miracles that Jesus performed. I'd never seen
one, however. This was going to be my first experience.
Harriet
Brown was a nurse who had just moved from Toronto, Ontario to Nome to work with
my parents in establishing the ministry there. She was with Dad and me
when we went into Mary's house. It was a pretty grim atmosphere, and I
wasn't sure I wanted to be there. Harriet leaned over Mary and made her
aware of our presence. Dad then began to talk to Mary about Jesus Christ,
salvation, deliverance, healing -- the whole package of Salvation, if you will
-- and at an appropriate moment asked Mary if she would like for us to pray
with her, and if she would like to accept the Lordship of Jesus Christ in her
life.
In
a very low, nearly inaudible voice, she responded, "Yes." Dad
led her in a prayer of repentance and acknowledgement of Jesus Christ.
She scarcely finished her prayer when she was seized with a coughing fit and
literally splattered her bed sheet with the blood she was expelling.
Dad
leaned over, put his hand on her forehead and commanded the tuberculosis and
every spirit of sickness and infirmity to leave her body. Thinking back
to that experience, it was an unusual prayer for him. He was normally
very quiet and reserved, and his usual practice -- at least the one I was most
familiar with throughout the years -- was to simply lay hands on folks and
declare their healing in a quiet, very unforceful manner.
Folks
who've known my father will tell you that he rarely raised his voice, was
almost always understated in the way he expressed himself and yet carried with
him an undeniable sense of authority that most folks -- whether Christian or
not -- saw and recognized.
When
he laid his hand on Mary Mendenhall's forehead and began to speak the name of
Jesus, her eyes opened wide and color began to return to her countenance.
She attempted to sit up in bed, but Harriet told her just to be quiet, rest and
allow the healing to be completed. It was -- to the best of my
recollection -- about three weeks before we saw her in church, and she was
still a bit wobbly (I'd guess that she might have weighed between 70 and 80
pounds the day we went to her home), but her recovery was obvious. Within
three months, she had put on close to 50 pounds (she stood about 5'4" in
height) and was the picture of health.
Mary's
healing and her walk with the Lord Jesus Christ became a catalyst among the
native community in Nome. Her strong voice and testimony of what the Lord
had done for her caused many curiosity seekers to come and see what this
Pentecostal preacher was all about. She personally led more people to
Jesus Christ than I can count. Until our departure from Nome in the summer
of 1953, she continued as a regular and in the mid-1950's decided she
needed to go to a Bible College and prepare for ministry.
While
at that college (memory says it was a Native-American Pentecostal college in
South Dakota), she met another Eskimo gentleman who shared the same call to
ministry. They married and in the years that followed traveled throughout
native communities along the western coast of Alaska preaching the Gospel and
leading people to a personal relationship with Jesus Christ.
Almost
exactly twenty years after she had been raised from her death bed, she and her
husband took over as pastors of the church my brother and I had helped Dad
build at Point Hope, Alaska. The ministry in Alaska had come full circle.
You
don't, as a farmer, plow hard ground without running into rocks from time to
time. Those rocks can be a real impediment to preparing a field for
planting and harvest. Nome was just that: hard ground with the occasional
rocks that became a real pain the neck.
One
such "rock" was a local attorney who took an instant dislike to Dad,
to our presence in the community, and to the ministry of the Holy Spirit.
Nome had seven or eight churches already operating when we arrived, but their
pastors were, sadly, just pacifying their congregations with Caesar-Milquetoast
messages and doctrines that permitted the people to live in ongoing sin while
believing that they were "Christians". Though you certainly
would never refer to Alvin Capener as a "fire and brimstone"
preacher, and though he rarely raised his voice in emotional fervor, his solid
preaching brought conviction and confrontation with truth to folks who
considered themselves "saved."
This
local attorney (we'll call him "Fred" for the sake of this story)
looked for every opportunity to make life miserable for Dad in the hopes that
he would leave town discouraged. He tangled with the wrong man!
Our
next-door-neighbor was a hardware store owner whose oldest son was demonized in
the true sense of the word. This boy (we'll refer to him as
"Henry") could be likeable one moment, and a terror the next.
No one knew what set him off, but he would without warning suddenly change
personality and become violent. His father was well aware of his son's
propensity for violence and knew that there were deep-rooted problems that
needed dealing with, but he never made any effort to address the situation.
One
day during outdoor play activities, Howard and I were playing with Henry when,
again without warning, he suddenly picked up a rock and threw it hard at Howard
("Howie"), striking him in the forehead. Howie dropped to the
ground bleeding and dazed as Henry yelled profanities at him. Dad
happened to be standing at the window and saw it happen. He ran outside
and grabbed Henry by his arm, turned him over his knee and gave him a spanking
with his hand. "Don't you EVER do that again, and don't you EVER
come back here to play with Regner and Howard," he said sternly with about
as much emotion as you'd ever see.
Henry
-- who was nearly twice Howie's age -- ran home crying. Henry's father
happened to be close buddies with Fred, our not-so-friendly attorney.
Fred saw this as the perfect opportunity to discredit Dad and launch an
attack. Together, Fred and our neighbor went to the police and filed
assault charges. The police showed up at our door and arrested Dad.
He was charged and subsequently released on his own recognizance.
When
the case went before the local judge who also was a very close friend of
Fred's, he declined to hear Dad's explanation of what happened, hearing only
the very colorful testimony of the "aggrieved" father. He
simply asked Dad if he had indeed spanked Henry and Dad responded that he
had. When he began to explain the circumstances, the judge shushed him,
banged his gavel down and said, "Rev. Capener, I'm fining you $500."
In
1950, a $500 fine would be roughly tantamount to being given a $50,000 fine
today. Had Dad taken the case to an appeals court, and the court
permitted to hear all of the details, there's no doubt it would have been
overturned. Anti-spanking laws were not on the books in those days, and
it was common practice even to spank someone else's children in aggravated
circumstances -- in Alaska, anyway.
Because
the driving force behind this case was the attorney, Dad turned to him in the
courtroom and said, "Fred, I'm going to pay this fine. But you'll
find in the end that you will be the loser for this. You do not come
against the work of God without consequences."
Whether
Dad specifically quoted to him Isaiah's prophecy or not ("No weapon that is formed against thee shall
prosper; and every tongue that shall rise against thee in judgment thou shalt
condemn. This is the heritage of the servants of the LORD, and their
righteousness is of me, saith the LORD." --
Isaiah 54:17), he was standing on it.
For
about two months following the incident and the public humiliation that Dad
took over it, his enemies in Nome crowed over it and had themselves a good old
time. Their jubilation was short lived, however. Fred decided to go
on a fishing trip with our neighbor and the judge in a lagoon not far from
Nome.
How
it happened was never quite clear, but the boat capsized. Fred drowned
and the judge died not long thereafter from exposure. Our next-door
neighbor barely escaped with his life. He remembered Dad's words in the
courtroom. Following Fred's funeral, our neighbor came to Dad and
apologized for being party to a wrongly-brought lawsuit. He knew his
friends had received judgment for their actions and their words against Dad.
It
was a lesson those folks in Nome never forgot -- not while we were there at
least. Dad and Mom were suddenly everyone's best friend. After
laboring to gain acceptance in the community and have a real door of utterance
with the people, folks suddenly wanted to be "friends" with this
preacher who had power and authority with God.
Though
he never accepted the Lord -- at least while we were still in Nome -- our
neighbor's attitude towards us did a 180-degree turnabout. When I
returned to Nome in the mid-1960's to minister, he was still there, running his
hardware business. His attitude towards me was that of an old friend glad
to see me back.
This
is where we will stop for today. We'll continue with this saga next week.
I remind those of you
in need of ministry that our Healing Prayer Call takes place on Mondays at 7:00
PM Eastern (4:00 PM Pacific). Our call-in number has changed to (712) 775-7035. The new Access Code
is: 323859#. For Canadians
who have difficulty getting in to this number, you can call (559) 546-1400. If someone answers and asks what your original call-in
number was, you can give them the 712 number and access code.
At the same time, in
case you are missing out on real fellowship in an environment of Ekklesia, our
Sunday worship gatherings are available by conference call – usually at about
10:45AM Pacific. That conference number is (605) 562-3140, and the access code is 308640#. We hope to make these gatherings available by Skype or
Talk Fusion before long. If you miss the live call, you can dial (605) 562-3149, enter the same access code and listen in
later.
Blessings
on you!
Regner
A. Capener
CAPENER MINISTRIES
RIVER
WORSHIP CENTER
Sunnyside, Washington 98944
Email
Contact: Admin@RiverWorshipCenter.org
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