ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK: DELLA DENISE, Part 1
February 13, 2015
During the next couple of weeks, while I'm preparing the next
series of Coffee Breaks on the character and nature of the Lord Jesus Christ
being worked in us, I'd like to reprise a couple of stories that I shared some
ten years ago when first beginning these Coffee Breaks.
Many years ago, Readers' Digest used to do a series of pieces
titled, "My Most Unforgettable Person." This week's (and next week's)
article is about the most remarkable, and the most astonishing woman I've ever
known -- my wife, Della. I know she gets a bit self-conscious when I start
talking about her, and she is very self-deprecating, but if ever there was a
gift from the Lord for me, it is this counterpart -- my other self -- Della
Denise Capener.
Born
sixty years ago as Della Denise Melson on January 1,
1955, she was born into an Okie family transplanted
to Washington State. I’m not using the word in a negative sense. Her family had
lived in Granite, Oklahoma for a couple of generations after leaving Tennessee,
Kentucky and Virginia.
At the age of four, Della began to have experiences of seeing angels. That same
year, she had a unique experience one night when the Lord Jesus Christ visited
her. What made this particular night so different was that the Lord also
appeared to her mother that night and said to her, “I’m coming to take Della
for myself.”
Her
mother was almost panic-stricken because she interpreted what the Lord was
saying to her to mean that Della was going to die that night. It took some
struggling in her spirit before she
released her daughter and said, “OK,” to the Lord.
As the Lord awakened Della, He told her to follow Him. She jumped out of bed
and followed Him outside the house where, to her utter astonishment, she saw a
ship. Now you have to understand just how strange this sight was. There are no
huge rivers or lakes in the Yakima Valley in Washington such that one would
expect to see a ship. She couldn't quite figure out what she was seeing, and
why this ship was there, but she followed the call of the Lord up the large
fishing net hung over the side. Just before reaching the deck, the Lord turned
to her and said, "Don't forget your bottle." She remembered a glass
bottle on the mantle of the fireplace that was her special bottle.
Again, the command didn't make sense, but she wasn't questioning it. She
climbed back down the gangplank and back into the house to get the bottle. When
she got back outside with the bottle, she realized the ship was getting ready
to leave and shouted, "Lord, don't leave without me!" She ran for all
she was worth and leaped up on the hanging fish net as it was being pulled back
on the ship. Out of breath, she handed the bottle to the Lord. He thereupon
took the bottle and threw it as hard as he could so that it vanished in the
darkness. Then Jesus turned to her, took her by the hand, and said, "Come
and enter in! Now everything will be all right."
In the years that followed, the experience was so real that Della was never
sure whether it actually happened or whether she had a dream. More than 20
years elapsed before she understood what had happened. Important foundations
were laid in her life that she would need in the coming years. In the years to
come, the Lord would remind her of the bottle -- and its significance.
Della
has no specific recollection of when it began, but she remembers being on the
swing in the back yard during her very young years, singing in the spirit and
speaking in tongues as though it was the most normal thing to do. At age eight,
in the midst of a revival at the church where the family attended, there was a
controversy that erupted over speaking in tongues. When some of the adults
heard then-eight-year-old Della speaking in tongues, it changed things
radically and an outpouring of Holy Spirit loosed that congregation from its
religious bondage.
Until she was twelve years of age, she had several more experiences with the
Lord in which He made clear to her the fact that He would never leave her nor
forsake her. Good thing, too, because she was about to go through a living
nightmare that would last for some 14 years.
In
her early teens, Della Denise began to experience the rebellion that so many
young people go through. At age fourteen, under the influence of drugs, she
concluded that she really didn’t belong to her parents and decided to strike
out on her own. A young man who she decided she was in love with had left for
Missouri, so she decided to hitchhike to see him.
Bad decision.
She was picked up by a 25-year-old man (whom I will refer to simply as Daniel).
He figured things out pretty quickly and took advantage of her youth,
innocence, and rebellion. Using the argument that, "I can't live without
you," and making her feel sorry for him, he compelled her to go with him
and agree to marry him. We won’t try to figure out how he pulled that one off
without being seized by the Law and thrown in prison, but under threats of physical
harm she stayed quiet and eventually settled into some semblance of married
life. “Daniel” was never prosecuted for his crimes.
It isn’t necessary to go into the horrors of the next fourteen years, the
abuses she suffered, the constant betrayal by “Daniel’s” affairs with other
women or his illicit drug distribution and hiding from the Law. What is
important is that, at age eighteen, her youthful experiences with the Lord
began to take effect. She had left Washington to move to Alaska where her
father was working with his construction business. In Fairbanks for a few short
months, her father suddenly dropped dead one day of a heart attack. He was 47
years old. The loss was traumatic.
Now the mother of a young baby girl, she began to attend a church in hopes of
reconnecting with that same Jesus she had known as a child. It was late in 1973
or early in 1974. Baby Shelley was very ill. She couldn’t walk. Her legs were
crooked. She had an extreme case of colic. She came down with a fever that just
got worse and worse.
Della’s family doctor had told her that the baby needed to be hospitalized, but
they had no insurance and feared the financial impact of the doctor and
hospital bills. Shelley’s temperature continued to rise. On a Sunday morning,
Della took the baby’s temperature, and it was 106. She got dressed, got Shelley
dressed, and took her to the church where she had begun to attend. It seemed
like she had to go through an army of folks who tried to slow her down, but
eventually she stood in front of the pastor with the baby in her arms. Shelley
was unconscious, lying limp and motionless. “Pastor, my baby is dying. I need
for you to pray for her.”
The pastor gently took Shelley into his arms and began to rebuke the fever. He
spoke healing as he prayed. As he held the baby, Shelley’s legs straightened in
front of their eyes. The fever dropped instantly. She opened her eyes and
looked around, alert for the first time in so long Della couldn’t remember. It
was a major turning point for Della.
Two
years later, a similar event would occur with daughter number two. Danielle was
born stone deaf. She couldn't hear or respond to the loudest noises around her.
Within days, Della realized that
something was wrong. At Danielle's first post-natal checkup at one week old,
Della took her to the regional audiologist for testing.
The reports showed no responses whatever to sounds at 120 db in her ears. For
those who don’t understand the significance of 120 db, 108 db is classified as
“concert level” for music. 116 db is the noise of a steam locomotive. Each 3 db
represents a doubling in sound pressure level. Thus, 120 db was well over twice
the noise level of a steam locomotive. The audiologist told Della that Danielle
was stone deaf, and that she’d better start learning sign language immediately
because that was how she was going to have to communicate with her daughter.
The promises of God made in her youth rang in Della’s entire being. She
absolutely refused to accept the diagnosis and demanded additional tests. The doctor
shook his head sympathetically saying, “It won’t make any difference. However,
you bring her back each month, and we’ll conduct more tests.” The testing went
on for seven continuous months.
An appointed (by the Lord) day came at the seventh month, and Della brought
friends along because she was sure the Lord was going to heal Danielle. They
sat down together in the testing room and the doctor placed Danielle in his
lap. There had been absolutely no indication of any change in Danielle. Della
whispered to the doctor, "OK, Keith! Let's do the tests in a room where
there is no sound whatever." Suddenly, Danielle turned and looked at her.
The audiologist shook his head. "Can't be. This was an involuntary
reaction -- perhaps to air movement on her face when you spoke." Della
began to laugh. She knew what had happened.
This time, the doctor whispered very quietly in Danielle’s opposite ear. She
turned to see where the sound was coming from. Now the doctor was frustrated.
This just couldn’t be! All of his previous tests had been run using
standardized testing techniques. They had proved conclusively that Danielle was
deaf. Again, he whispered in the other ear, and again, Danielle responded.
Della’s friends were standing on the other side of the glass watching things
unfold, along with a couple of nurses.
Tears began to run down their faces as they realized that the Lord had healed
Danielle right while she sat in the doctor’s lap. All of the tests were re-run
again. This time, the results showed that her hearing was better than perfect.
She could hear sounds so faint the overwhelming majority of folks never hear.
Despite the birth of two more children during the next four years, Della’s
“marriage” continued to deteriorate. The abuse towards Della had never gotten
really physical until he made two attempts on her life. It had reached
monumental proportions emotionally and mentally. Unfortunately, the abuse had
also gotten physical with the children. She realized that if he succeeded in
killing her there would be no one to care for the children. Because of the
breakdown of the marriage, her children had become the focal point of her life.
The children were her life! A day finally came when
“Daniel” agreed with Della that they needed to get a divorce and go their separate
ways.
It was late in 1982. I was President of the Christian Broadcasting Network of
Alaska, as well as overseeing the development of Operation Blessing for the
state and pastoring a new fellowship in Fairbanks
called The House of Praise. The CBN operations had begun to be moved from
Barrow to Fairbanks two years earlier. Separation and divorce was in the making
from my first wife who had recently left for the third time in our married
years. The duress from the persecution and constant threats on our lives in
Barrow had far exceeded her breaking point, and she wanted no more of the
ministry.
Have
to say that because of the way God has led me throughout the years, I seem to
have always been on the edge of (or over the edge!) of controversy. Being active
in the ministry of deliverance during the 70's, 80's and 90's made me a focal
point of religious controversy and contention because of a religious doctrine
within some denominations or groups suggesting that Christians can't be
afflicted by evil spirits.
That
said, I’m not throwing rocks at my first wife. She had endured things
(including assassination attempts on my life as well as multiple assaults,
seizure and beating of our children by "strangers" who sought to
drive me from the area) that would have taken lesser women to the Looney bin.
And, to be perfectly honest, she'd never been called to the ministry. Her
marriage to me placed her in situations she'd never been equipped by the Lord
to deal with.
Della had joined the CBN operation in late 1981 and become the administrator
for a social services program we called Operation Blessing – Alaska. It was an
outgrowth of the program Pat Robertson had begun in Virginia Beach, Virginia
with the national CBN ministry. Over the span of a couple years, Della had
become my closest confidant and the best friend I’d ever had in my life. I
remember sitting in an Aglow prayer meeting and watching her responses to the
concerns of women, and seeing the depth of spiritual wisdom God had built in
her. I trusted that -- and do to this day!
One day, she brought her four children to me and asked me to pray over them.
While I was praying for them, the Lord spoke to me and said, "I'm going to
give these children to you, and I want you to be a father to them." That
was different! I began to argue with the Lord. "But, Lord, they already
have a father!"
He
answered me as clearly as I've ever heard him. "No, "Daniel"
doesn't have the ability to be a father. I want you to be their father." I
wasn't quite sure how to take that, or even how in the world the Lord would
effect it practically.
It was only a matter of six or seven months before Della and I found ourselves
exchanging marriage vows with each other. It isn’t necessary to get into the
developments that led to our marriage. We both experienced some
back-to-back-to-back events that clearly demonstrated to both of us that the
Lord was putting us together. Complete strangers who had no idea of what they
were saying delivered confirming words from the Lord to both of us. Because of
the controversy that would erupt over the proximity of our divorces and
prospective remarriage to each other, the Lord had spoken to Della one day and
said, "I'm going to confirm this union to you so many times and in so many
ways that you'll be sick of the confirmations."
He
did! And it was a good thing, too!
For
those people who know Della today, and those who knew her 30 years ago, there
isn't anyone who will argue that she has undergone a transition in her
personality that's nothing less than
dramatic. There were many things that would contribute to that change, and
being thrust into the jewelry business was certainly one of them, but we often
laugh about the fact that one of my fellow-broadcasters back in the mid-to-late
1980's referred to Della as "Mouse Knuckles."
He,
of course, only saw her on the surface, and not from a spiritual perspective,
but Della was quite retiring and quiet when we first
got married. Being in sales certainly helped to draw her out, but the spiritual
challenges that unfolded in the early years of our marriage, and the overcoming
of those challenges coupled with seeing God's miraculous intervention time
after time after time developed a holy boldness that has only increased with
the years.
Some
three and a half years after we had been married, Della's children (they were
definitely MY children as well -- the Lord had seen to that!) were kidnapped
out of our front yard by their biological father and spirited out of the state
within hours. No event I can think of is more emotionally wrenching to any
parent, and Della was no exception.
Sorry
to leave you with a cliffhanger, but this is where I'll leave it for today.
We'll finish this narrative next week.
I remind those of you in need of healing of our Healing Prayer
Call on Mondays at 7:00 PM Eastern. Once again, the number to call for prayer
is (805) 399-1000. Then enter the access code: 124763#. Also want to let you
know that our Sunday worship gatherings are available by conference call –
usually at about 10:45AM Pacific. That conference number is (559) 726-1300, and
the access code is 308640#.
Blessings
on you!
Regner
A. Capener
CAPENER MINISTRIES
RIVER
WORSHIP CENTER
Sunnyside, Washington 98944
Email
Contact: Admin@RiverWorshipCenter.org
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