ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK: 40 YEARS BELOW ZERO XIII
And a fabulous good day to you!
Don't know that I've ever heard of a TGIW day, but there
must be one. Right? After all,
today is Wednesday, and we've got lots to be thankful for!
Monday's Coffee Break apparently hit a nerve with a few
folks, so let me begin by saying that it was not my intention to offend any of
my Russian Orthodox friends or readers by my remarks. Guess maybe I need to clarify myself.
I have lots of friends who are Russian Orthodox -- good friends, in fact -- and
they understand that my position or statements come from a spiritual
perspective and are not intended to be personal slams against them, their
manner of worship or traditions.
I've no quarrel with the gorgeous music in the Russian
Orthodox church. I don't even mind if folks
want to retain some of the form or the pomp and ceremony.
I'm not here to judge folks who want to retain pomp and ceremony.
That's between them and the Lord.
Where I take issue with Orthodoxy is when priests and
ministers who are supposed to represent the life and ministry of the Lord Jesus
Christ (along with the power and authority, and the agape love and faith which are characteristic of Jesus Christ) trade
that life for pomp, ceremony and traditions of men, and leave out the weightier
matters of love, faith, power, and the authority of the believer in Christ. That's when Christianity becomes a religion
instead of a personal relationship with the Lord.
That's when it becomes death warmed over instead of having the power to change
and transform lives into living examples of Jesus Christ.
There is nothing religious about the Lord. There is nothing religious about a personal
relationship with Him.
Tradition and ceremony are one thing.
They just don't happen to be life-giving in a spiritual sense.
They may well please people's soul and flesh, but that isn't what Christianity
is about. There is no communication of the
power of God in ceremony, tradition, pomp and circumstance.
There is no life-changing power in ceremony.
There is no life-giving agape love in traditions established by men -- no
matter how esthetically beautiful or eye-pleasing (or ear-pleasing) it may be. Jesus was/is NEVER about tradition: He is about
transforming us and restoring us to the image in which He created us before the
fall. He is out to have for Himself a family
of folks who are just like Him.
OK? Are we clear?
Have traditions, if you like. Have ceremony,
if you like. Have all the pomp and
circumstance that tickles your fancy. Just
don't leave out the real life that comes in a personal love-relationship with
Jesus Christ, along with the attendant demonstrations of His life and power.
As you will see in the unfolding story of Saint Paul
Island, despite the opposition, the religious persecution, the all-out efforts
to literally steal the land out from under my folks, their home and the church
they built, the testimony they left behind and the ministry they poured out
through their lives in 35 years of labor there (21 for Dad before he went to be
with the Lord) brought change to the community, a lasting tribute to them, and
salvation and transformation in the lives of every Russian Orthodox priest who
served on the island during their years.
Let me begin by saying that Della and I absolutely love
Saint Paul Island. We
love the people there. If the Lord had called
us to that island, we'd be there in a heartbeat!
We count many of the islanders as personal friends -- family, if you will. The Lord did a bonding together for us with
those folks that has never left. To us, Saint
Paul Island is like Hawaii without the trees and warm tradewinds.
But, wait, I'm getting ahead of myself.
Christmas morning, 1965, should have begun like any other
Saint Paul morning. It didn't.
Very strong winds -- hurricane force winds, in fact -- had been blowing in from
the east. The waters off Saint Paul Island are
deep.
Before I continue, let me provide you with a bit of
perspective.
In Monday's post, I told you that Saint Paul Island is
located in the Bering Sea some 350 miles north of Cold Bay in the Aleutians,
and approximately 500 miles from Dillingham in Bristol Bay on the mainland (or
a thousand miles, give or take, from Anchorage). Being
situated in the Bering Sea (one could call that the northernmost waters of the
Pacific or the southernmost waters of the Arctic Ocean) puts it right where the
majority of North America's storms have their origins.
Now, if you happen to be a meteorologist and take issue
with that remark, I'll forgive you. Meteorologically, there may be other factors
involved, but if you've ever lived out in the
The Discovery Channel (and its counterpart, the Travel
Channel) airs weekly programs that refer to the Pribil of
Island waters as the most dangerous place to fish in the entire world. An average of 17 people lose their lives in
those waters every single year. Our oldest
son, Chris, served as a fishing vessel's chief engineer for one season in those
waters and decided the risks weren't worth it.
The same vessel he served on went down without a trace with all hands on board
the year after he quit, and he lost some of his close friends from Saint Paul
Island.
OK. I've said all that to
lay a foundation for Christmas morning, 1965.
Dad and Mom awoke to hear a very peculiar sound. It almost (?)
sounded like they were on a houseboat, with waves lapping at the side.
Dad got out of bed, put his britches on and went to open
the front door. 300 - 500 yards in any
direction was nothing but ocean. It actually
looked (and felt) like the house had been floated out to sea.
In fact, the house was still securely anchored to the land.
Dad had built the place at Saint Paul just like he had built in Barrow,
Wainwright and Point Hope, positioning the house on posts driven into the
ground with about three feet of space between the floor joists and the ground.
Good thing! Had he built
any lower, the house would have been flooded and might well have floated away. As it was, the water level was right up to the
level of the floor joists. The strong east
winds had brought the water level up to the point where the lagoon had flooded
and the tide had come in, swamping everything on the lower parts of the island. The southern tip of the island was a hill
where most of the island's residents had their homes.
Those homes were cut off from the rest of the island by the water which had
overflowed the low-lying peninsula where Dad had built.
Dad found himself once again (remember 1944?) speaking to
the storm and the seas and commanding peace. I
do not remember how many hours they had to wait for the waters to subside, but
the damage to their place was relatively minor.
Other houses built during the days of the Russian fur traders broke apart and
floated away, but the community took everything pretty much in stride. They did live, after all, in one of the most
consistently windy parts of the world where there are only an average of seven
days a year when the wind does not blow at least 15 knots (17 mph).
Realizing that although this might be a freak situation,
it was still a potentially deadly location in the event of future storms of
greater intensity, and he applied to the Bureau of Fisheries for a change in
his land grant -- a change that would move him to somewhat higher ground. The following summer, he jacked the house up
by hand and moved it to a new location some three hundred yards to the west --
but not before hauling gravel and scoria from nearby Black Diamond Hill and
raising the ground level by some three-to-four feet first.
In a way it was reminiscent of Barrow and having to fill in swampy ground with
all those truck loads of gravel before he could begin construction of the
church there.
Saint Paul Island differed from every other place where
Dad had gone to build and to establish the Gospel.
Sure, there were some pre-existing churches in the communities before we
arrived, but mostly (at least at first) he was welcomed and made to feel
desired in the community. Saint Paul was not
that at all. Hostility was the order of the day. Dad and Mom were interlopers.
After all, who did they think they were coming to bring some new religion into
town when what they had was just fine?
And therein lay the issue.
They weren't there to bring in some new religion.
In fact, they were there to do the complete opposite.
Jesus is about as un-religious as you can possibly get!
Nope. They weren't there to bring another
religion, they were there to bring the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
Jesus had put it this way (see Luke 4:18-19), "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he hath anointed
me to preach the gospel to the poor; he hath sent me to heal the brokenhearted,
to preach deliverance to the captives, and recovering of sight to the blind, to
set at liberty them that are bruised, To preach the acceptable year of the
Lord."
Saint Paul Island was an island of the "poor" in
just about ever sense of the word.
Don't get me wrong. There were some
righteous folk there. There were people on the
island who had experienced a genuine salvation experience with Jesus Christ. There were a few even who were unashamed to
speak of their walk with the Lord. They were
in such a minority, however, that they were pretty much intimidated into
keeping silence.
The Orthodox priest ruled the island with an iron fist. His word was law. Whatever he said went -- no matter what anyone
else had to say about it. Even in cases where
crimes had been committed and Alaska State Troopers had been sent to
investigate, when the priest commanded silence concerning the issue so as to
protect the guilty, people with knowledge of the crime would remain silent and
not speak out.
The result was that Saint Paul Island was a literal
garbage disposal. The
assistant priest was sleeping with women in the community and getting them
pregnant, and having children by them whom he wouldn't support.
The Alaska Department of Social Services couldn't get any cooperation in
forcing him to pay child support because the senior priest commanded silence in
the community.
The lay reader in the Russian Orthodox church
was a falling down drunk who persistently beat his wife and children, sometimes
to the point of breaking bones and causing severe injury.
When some of these same people began to come to the church
services Dad and Mom held, heard the truth of the Gospel of Jesus Christ for
the first time in their lives and made a commitment to the Lord resulting in
dramatic change in their lives, the priest issued an edict to the community.
"If you go to the Capeners'
church and die, you will not be buried in the city cemetery. You will be buried in the cemetery reserved for
sinners."
You may laugh at the absurdity of the edict, but to those
people it meant either going to Heaven or Hell. Out of fear, some folks recanted their profession of salvation. For awhile it had a measurable effect on
the number of people who dared to come to the worship services.
The non-native population of the island couldn't have cared less about the
edict since most of them were not Russian Orthodox; and they became the core of
the church for years to come.
In the 1960's and early 70's, Saint Paul Island's
non-native population consisted of U.S. Coast Guard personnel, U.S. Weather
Bureau personnel, Bureau of Fisheries people whose primary home was often in
Anchorage or Seattle, or somewhere on the west coast, and Department of
Education folks -- the Superintendent of Schools for the Pribilof
Islands (also including Saint George Island), the local school principals and
some non-local school teacher families.
For a time, the two churches -- the Russian Orthodox, and
the Assembly of God Church -- represented a picture in racial division with
mostly White, and a few Black and Hispanic folks attending Dad & Mom's
services and Aleuts attending the Russian Orthodox services.. It was an unintentional consequence of the
threats leveled by the priest against the longtime residents of the community. Things were not
going to continue that way, however.
Mom made it her business to get out and mingle in the community. Her flair for
socializing and creating public dinners, teas and the like (And, Brother,
you've never seen a cook or a baker like Mom!
That lady could put together culinary concoctions that were the envy of every
community in which she ever lived.) drew women who were sick of staying at
home, doing nothing, or being abused by their husbands.
Let's take just one lady as an example. We'll refer to her as "Ludy."
She was hardly the picture of an abused woman. For appearance and mannerisms, Ludy
might as well have been a Czarina. She had
both a commanding personality and carried herself like royalty.
Ludy was a woman of influence in the Russian Orthodox
church, and her voice carried a lot of clout among the ladies on the island. She and Mom hit it off together and became
fast friends. Their friendship lasted through
more than 30 years before both died in 2000.
A day came when during the course of a normal, everyday
conversation, Mom asked Ludy if she had ever made
Jesus Christ Lord of her life. Ludy had always professed to be a Christian, but this was
not something she was familiar with. When Mom
explained what she was talking about, Ludy bowed her
head right then and invited Jesus Christ to become both Lord and Savior of her life. It would be a turning point of sorts in the community. The joy that began to be exhibited in Ludy's life was infectious, and other women began to check
things out.
Mom, being the entertaining-type anyway, was in her element. It was made to order for her. The apostle Paul, in letters to Timothy and
Titus, makes reference to a bishop being "a lover of
hospitality"
or
"given to hospitality." The apostle Peter, in his letters, instructs folks to "use hospitality one to another." (see I Timothy
3:2, Titus 1:8, and I Peter 4:9) I personally can't think of any person
who better exhibited this trait than my mother.
She "used hospitality" to minister the Gospel in ways she must have
invented at the direction of the Holy Spirit.
One thing about it: when women begin to get excited about
something, their husbands always want to check things out. No matter how retiring a guy might be, if his wife
gets turned on about something, and her excitement lasts more than a few
minutes, a few days or a few weeks, he's going to get curious.
Aleut (the pronunciation, incidentally, is: al'.leh.oot)
men are just like everyone else in this respect.
Ludy's husband decides to check things out -- but not the way you'd think. It seems that Ludy
and her husband had a daughter who lived in Seattle (it may have been
Anchorage, but memory says Seattle).
Guess I missed telling you something important, and this
is the place to stick it in.
I've already told you in a previous Coffee Break that Dad had passed his
tests and received his General Class Ham license while in Point Hope. He was assigned the call letters,
KL7-EGE. One of the things he'd done was to rebuild an ancient linear
amplifier capable of putting out a kilowatt of power.
He linked that to a Swan 500.
The Coast Guard station had abandoned a three hundred-foot
tower in favor of a newer, more durable 600-foot tower.
The old tower was lowered to the ground with some assistance, and the Coast
Guard commander gave it to Dad to do with whatever he wanted.
He disassembled most of the tower, but kept a 60-foot portion to put up a
40-meter quad antenna, along with some directional inverted dipoles at other
commonly used frequencies. (You Ham radio
aficionados know what I'm talking about.)
This gave him some wonderful and very reliable radio
communications which allowed him to link up with people world-wide. It also gave him just about the only means of
reliable communications on the island with the outside world.
I've said all that to say this: Ludy's
husband (we'll refer to him as "Prokoff")
wanted to make contact with their daughter, and apparently there was some
family emergency involved. He came by the
house one morning to ask Dad if it was possible to get a message through to
their daughter. Dad dropped what he was doing
and immediately went to the radio. Within
minutes, he had established a link with a Ham radio operator in Seattle who
linked up with the phone system and made the call to the daughter.
Prokoff was able to resolve some critical issues in a
matter of minutes.
After the phone patch was disconnected, Prokoff hung around for a few minutes to talk. He obviously had a
spiritual burden he was carrying that he had not been able to deal with and
chose that moment to unload on Dad. Dad
quietly listened, then asked if they could pray together.
It was a made-to-order opportunity. Before the
morning ended Prokoff had accepted Jesus Christ as
his personal Lord and Savior.
I've run out of day, so let's pick this up on Friday. See you then.
God NEVER calls His people to do the possible.
"Possible" is only the rational mind's way of dealing with human capabilities. God ALWAYS calls His people to do and
perform the impossible. "Impossible"
only exists in rational thinking.
"Impossible" is ALWAYS "probable" and
"accomplished" when seen through the eyes of faith.
Bless you.
Regner
A. Capener
CAPENER MINISTRIES
RIVER
WORSHIP CENTER
Sunnyside, Washington 98944
Email
Contact: Admin@RiverWorshipCenter.org
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