ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK: 40 YEARS BELOW ZERO, Part 3
December 11, 2015
Good Morning! If I seem to take a lot of time in laying
foundations for this story, bear with me. These foundations are important
in understanding complete obedience to the Lord, and not allowing the influence
of others around you who do not share the call, or the vision, and have been compromised
by their fear of man, their fear of death or their fear of evil.
If
Dad could have been called a man of “true grit,” Mom was no less an adventurer.
Furthermore,
she knew the call of God in pretty much the same intensity (if not methods) Dad
had experienced. The thought that Alvin could be lost at sea when God had
so remarkably and miraculously called them to Alaska just didn't sit -- AT
ALL! "No, thank you, Gentlemen. God didn't call us to Alaska
just to allow Alvin to drown at sea. We'll wait." The
fishermen shook their heads at their perception of her state of denial but
allowed as how they'd wait a bit longer.
Meanwhile,
Alvin Capener is having the ride of his life!
His 50-foot boat is being tossed to and fro. Huge waves are crashing down
over the craft, temporarily burying it before it could (and did) come bobbing
back to the surface, right side up. Hours of this kind of abuse were
causing the boat to creak and groan, and by late Thursday afternoon, he knew
the boat wasn't going to make it much longer.
After
one of these "combers" buried the boat and he came bobbing back up,
he dropped to his knees beside his bunk bed and prayed a very quick
prayer. "Father, I know that you didn't call me to Alaska just to
allow me to die at sea. This has to stop!"
Watching
for an opportune moment, he opened the cabin door, dashed out onto the deck of
the boat and raised his hand out over the water. "In the name of
Jesus Christ, I command you, PEACE, BE STILL!" Then he dashed back
into the cabin and slammed the door before the next wave could hit.
It
was the last wave! Within 20 minutes, the sea was glassy calm. The
skies cleared, and the storm vanished as though it had never happened. [It
is a matter of meteorological record that the National Weather Bureau showed
the storm ceasing. Meteorologists had no natural explanation for what
occurred.] And the fish began to bite. Did they ever begin to bite!
With
his engine running, the fish were getting caught in the lines and being chopped
in half by the prop because he just couldn't get to them fast enough.
He'd had the engine running to help hold his position, but a gentle breeze came
up and began to blow him back in towards the Oregon coast. So he shut
down the engine and let the boat drift. Meantime, he was pulling in fish
as fast as he could.
Saturday
morning comes, and no one has seen hide nor hair of Alvin Capener.
There's been no word, and a few fishermen ventured out to see if they could
spot any sign. By late Saturday morning -- nearing the noon hour -- the
same delegation decided they needed to help Lillian Lorraine Capener face reality. Her husband was gone!
Despite the fact that no one could account for the sudden death of the storm,
and the accompanying change of weather, coupled with the fact that no one had
seen or heard anything that would indicate he was still alive, these fishermen
felt very secure in their "facts."
"Ummm.... Uhhh, Mrs. Capener, really! You can't still believe Al survived
that storm! No one has heard a thing. There is simply no sign he's
still alive. We really need to get on with the preparations for his
funeral."
Most
women would be pretty close to a breaking point by now, but Mom wasn't
"most women." She was absolutely convinced that God had
protected her husband, that he would return safe and sound, and they would --
on schedule -- be headed off to Alaska by the fall of the year. "I'm
sorry, Gentlemen, but we just have to wait a little longer. He'll be
here. You'll see. The Lord is with him."
Mom's
response to them made them sure she had just gone off the deep end, was in
denial and incapable of facing "facts."
"I'm
sorry, Gentlemen, but we just have to wait a little longer. He'll be
here. You'll see. The Lord is with him."
Long
about 5:00 PM that Saturday afternoon, someone spotted a dot on the
horizon. Binoculars showed that it was a boat -- or at least a part of a
boat -- moving very slowly towards the coastline. Word spread quickly
throughout the community, and it wasn't long before a very large part of Ilwaco's citizenry were perched in every available viewing
spot, watching this boat slowly make for the docks.
What
folks finally saw left them in total disbelief. It was Dad, all
right. It's not a wonder the first views made observers wonder if the
boat was really intact. He was standing at the wheelhouse, but he was
standing in fish. The holds were full. There wasn't one square inch
of deck space to put another fish. He had thrown fish into the
cabin. There were fish covering the floor of the cabin, fish under his
bunk, fish on his bunk.
That
the boat hadn't capsized was a miracle of astounding proportions. The
decks were 4 inches above the water. The boat was so heavily laden with
fish that most of its floatation was gone. It was one of those fish
stories to beat all fish stories!
Remember
Peter, James and John, and their astounding catch of fish after Jesus told them
to "cast your nets on
the other side"?
They caught so many fish they had to call for help. Neither of their
boats nor their nets would hold it all, and Luke (5:2-4) tells us that they
began to sink because of the weight.
That
Dad's boat stayed afloat was spectacular testimony to those Ilwaco
fishermen -- many of whom were unbelievers and atheists. In the days to
come, however, the community -- and indeed, the entire fishing community along
the western coasts of the United States, Canada and Mexico -- were going to
hear just how spectacular this seven-week fishing season had been for this
"Landlubber-Preacher-Fisherman."
Jim
had to call for help to carefully move the boat up to Raymond where the fish
could be unloaded for processing. Early the next week, Dad went to see
him to get a tally of the fish caught. He was pretty sure he'd made the
$1,000 he'd hoped for, but he really had no idea where the totals were.
"Capener," Jim said, "In seven weeks, you've personally taken 39,000 pounds of Albacore Tuna. To you, this catch is worth -- and here's the check to pay for it -- $6,300.00!"
A
reporter for the Associated Press got hold of the story and began to do some
research. The next newspaper headline read,
"LANDLUBBER-PREACHER-FISHERMAN SETS ALL TIME WORLD RECORD."
That was more than 70 years ago, and it still stands today as the all-time
record for catching Albacore with that size boat and "gear."
The
funny part of it was that there was no "gear." It was just
lines strung over the side of the boat. Every last one of those 39,000
pounds of fish were taken by hand!
You've
gotten it, haven't you? Not only had the Lord provided the thousand
dollars to pay off the church debt, He had provided the $5,000 for the move to
Alaska, the building of the new church in Nome -- and, according to my Mother,
$300 for her for "stuff." Hohohohoho...............
And some folks think God doesn't care about the little things!
But
wait. This story isn't ended. Not by half! Think we've seen
miracles? Well, you don't know miracles, yet.
With
fishing season at an end, some of the old die-hard fishermen who'd previously thought
Alvin Capener was a looney
landlubber who had no business being at sea came around to see him.
"Well, Capener, you've taken our breath
away! As a fisherman, you're some kind of whiz kid! You'll have to
take your earnings from this season and buy yourself a nice, big boat and some
fine tuna gear. Next year, you'll really make a haul!" Dad
just smiled and said, "No. You don't understand. God has given
me this miraculous catch of fish so that I can be a fisher of men. We're
leaving for Alaska in October."
Those
fishermen just walked away shaking their heads. It made no sense to
them. But the majority of the fishermen working out of the port of Ilwaco that year had done well -- extremely well -- because
they had caught Albacore tuna instead of salmon, which was bringing roughly
one-sixth the price of tuna. Following the 1944 season, they went out and
bought bigger boats and better tuna gear.
In
1945, most of those same fishermen were nearly bankrupted. They hardly
caught enough tuna to pay the bills, let alone make a profit. But salmon
were back in the coastal waters -- not Albacore Tuna. What
happened? This same bright AP reporter who'd figured Dad had set an
all-time record with his tuna catch decided to do some further
investigation. What he found astonished him.
The
shift had begun -- as previously noted -- in the late summer of 1943 from
salmon to tuna. Ilwaco had never been known as
a tuna port. It had always been noted for its salmon. When tuna
began showing up along the west coast that year, fishermen had been overjoyed
because of the financial prospects and an official "tuna season" was
declared for 1944. 1945 came and the tuna had mostly disappeared.
Those who actually did catch tuna had to go hundreds of miles out to sea.
In
studying the records of ocean currents, this same AP reporter discovered that
the entire Japanese Current had swung off course -- way off course -- bringing
warmer water (and not coincidentally, Albacore Tuna) to the eastern Pacific.
You
see it, don't you? When God calls His people to do the supernatural, He
sometimes alters circumstances and "nature" to set things up.
Dad was not a fisherman by trade or by experience. For him to catch
39,000 pounds of Albacore Tuna -- and out-fish the professional fishermen in
the process -- was a stupendous miracle of its own. Had he taken 39,000
pounds of salmon, his financial take would have been one-sixth the amount -- or
just over a thousand dollars. God moved the entire Japanese Current to
send the right kind of fish into those waters.
It
was no big deal for the Lord to do that! But it took the obedience of one
man -- Alvin Capener -- to set it up, and everyone
else prospered because of it. Those who thought to cash in on that
prosperity the next year without the blessing of the Lord, and set their sights
on the money instead went broke.
So
there you have it: a fish story to top all fish stories, capped with miracles
of provision, a miracle of calming the violent storms, and a miracle of moving
the entire Japanese Current off course.
True
to form, Alvin Capener and family set sail for Alaska
in October, 1944, arriving in Juneau where -- because of a measles epidemic in
Nome -- Mom, my brother, Howard, and I were forced to remain for a couple of
weeks. Dad went on ahead to Nome to secure temporary quarters for the
family. On November 4, 1944, the rest of us boarded an Alaska Star
Airlines Ford Tri-Motor and flew from Juneau to Anchorage to Nome.
Dad
had pre-ordered and paid for the building materials to build the church in
Nome, and it arrived by Alaska Steamship about the time of our arrival in
Nome. He was able to secure a piece of ground quickly, and set about to
begin construction. The full story of the construction of the church in
Nome, the way that God provided an alcoholic construction crew on a dare from
(then-) Air Force Colonel Marvin "Muktuk"
Marston (he's a story all by himself!), the miraculous changes that began to
take place in the community, and the challenges faced -- including lawsuits,
the intended purpose of which was to drive the family out of Nome -- the very
public vindication that God did, along with the "accidental" death of
the attorney who spurred the lawsuits, all make for more stories than I can
possibly recount in these short (?) Coffee Breaks.
The
nine years we spent (that go-around) in Nome (I went back there to work and
minister in the mid-1960's) were some of the toughest years of just plain old
plowing in order to prepare the ground to produce a spiritual harvest.
After six years of serious ministry and foundation-laying with visible results
to show for it, those Assembly of God brethren in the Northwest District
decided they'd made a serious mistake in opposing Alvin Capener's
move to Alaska.
Not
only did they make a public apology for their opposition, the General
Superintendent of the Assemblies of God in Springfield, Missouri, Fred Vogler, made a special trip to Nome to visit this
then-farthest north, and farthest west church (Nome is farther west than
Honolulu) in the world, and to let Dad know that the Assemblies would stand
firmly behind him in his ministry and future endeavors.
Ironically,
it wouldn't be the last time Dad would face opposition from denominational
leaders as he continued to move at the direction of the Holy Spirit to
establish more and more churches throughout the arctic. His stock answer
in trade became, "Brethren, you didn't call me. God did, and I'm
bound to obey His Word and His voice before I listen to anyone else."
That’s
where we will leave it for today. See you next week as we continue this
saga.
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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MINISTRIES is a tax-exempt church ministry. Should
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