40 Years Below Zero IV
Good Morning, All You Blessed People!
This is the best day of your life. Fact is, this is the best week of your life! And things are going to get even better! Better believe it!
Here's hoping I actually get this Coffee Break posted today. The day started off with a bang, and I've been running 90 miles an hour since.
Every so often I talk about my youngest granddaughter, Jessica. She and her brother, Andrew, are spending a few days with us again, and predictably enough we get to enjoy her rather remarkable and unusual humor.
In many ways, Jessica is just like I was at that age (5). The first thing she does when she comes into my office is to look for my coffee cup. If there is some coffee in it, whether cold or hot, she'll immediately take a sip. (I used to do the same thing.) Yesterday, she did just that. Then she comes out with a real corker! "I was hungry and you gave me coffee to drink," she says, deliberately mis-quoting from Jesus' statement in Matthew 25:45, "For I was an hungered, and ye gave me meat."
Brother! Did I ever do a double-take! Then she continues, "Inasmuch as you have done it unto one of the least......" Then she broke up laughing. So did I.
And she's only five years old? Yikes! Look out, World! Jessica is on her way.
And today's coffee -- if you're done laughing -- is some San Francisco Bay French Roast. The French Press is full and running over, and I need to pour me a cup. Back in a second.
OK, got yours yet?
When we finished on Monday, I was saying that my brother and I enrolled at Burnhamthorpe Collegiate Institute in Toronto (and stayed with some friends who lived in Toronto) while our parents headed south to Texas.
Travels throughout Texas and ministering in the dozens, if not hundreds, of churches that Dallas pastor, Lonnie Mullen, opened up through his contacts resulted in an outpouring of help in many ways. Apart from the financial assistance and gifts given to Dad and Mom for the expansion of the church in Barrow, a literal army of prayer warriors assembled to stand behind their ongoing ministry.
First stage of Barrow church construction Howard Andersen preparing timbers for additional posts
Lew Welker pre-cutting 2x4's for wall studs Gathered for Praise
When we finally returned to Barrow in the late summer of 1958, the materials for the expansion had been ordered and paid for. During our absence, the move of the Holy Spirit across the arctic had flourished under Paul & Marguerite Bills to the extent that we were being asked to build churches at Kaktovik (on Barter Island in the Arctic Ocean) near the Canadian border, Wainwright (which was 90 miles from Barrow) and Point Hope (which is the farthest northwest community in Alaska.
Before that could happen, however, the Barrow church needed expansion, and the Holy Spirit had some things in the works none of us could have expected in our wildest fancies. Well, OK, maybe we should have, but in an era when the publicly miraculous seemed mostly relegated to Oral Roberts' tent crusades, R. W. Schambach, T. L. Osborn and a small group of faith-teaching evangelists.
What we saw was a state of spiritual hunger in people that the Lord simply could not and would not miss fulfilling. The first Sunday that we had the auditorium enlarged and ready to meet more folks, the place was packed like it was when the church first opened its doors.
During our absence from Barrow, one of the Eskimo men who had come to know Jesus Christ and had been baptized in the Holy Spirit was -- by Alaskan standards anyway -- relatively famous. His name was Ned Nusunginya. I don't know how many of you are bookworms, or have been into reading arctic adventure stories, but perhaps you've heard of a book about a dog named Balto who was the lead dog in a team that rushed serum to Nome during a diphtheria epidemic in 1925.
More than 20 mushers participated in a run to get the serum to Nome from Anchorage. Ned Nusunginya was one of those mushers. He later repeated the adventure in getting serum to other communities in the arctic during deadly blizzard conditions. That original run from Anchorage to Nome has been immortalized in arctic sports through the Iditarod dog race which is run now annually following pretty much the same route that carried the serum to Nome.
As Ned had grown throughout the years, he had developed a hatred for "Whitey," or "tunniks," as most arctic natives used to refer to white folks. Although the term has generally come to be used nowadays with reference to any newcomer, white or otherwise, just as the term "cheechako" is used in the interior of Alaska, in early years, the term, "tunnik," was a very racist term meaning "dirty white man." Though he managed to keep his racist feelings mostly to himself in his work environment (he climbed the ladder of responsibility working his way to a supervisory position for the DEW Line -- Distant Early Warning radar system), he also had become an alcoholic.
Thus when Ned would drink, he was pretty free with his "colorful metaphors" and thought nothing of cursing the "tunniks" he worked with and belittling their labors. Over the years, alcohol and tobacco began to take their toll on Ned and his health deteriorated. When, just past his 60th birthday, he was introduced to a real relationship with Jesus Christ and subsequently baptized in the Holy Spirit, the change in him was so dramatic as to stun those who had known him throughout his life, and those who worked with him on a daily basis. More than that, he was healed of cirrhosis of the liver, heart problems and numerous other physical ailments.
Ned became the picture of health. He also became Dad's interpreter when he preached to natives who spoke or understood little English. Dad had been studying the Inupiat language and Ned began to work with him on a daily basis to help him through his pronunciation problems. FYI, the Inupiat language is extremely guttural, and in some ways matches the Hebrew language for breathing and articulation.
One Sunday morning, Dad decided to begin experimenting with his use of the Inupiat tongue while Ned was standing beside him. He had just preached a strong evangelistic message and bowed his head in preparation to pray. "Unjgaiuta," he said, putting the accent on the "u." Ned nearly dropped his false teeth, trying to contain himself. He regained his composure and said quietly, "Unjgaiuta," correcting the pronunciation and putting the accent on the "ai" sound (pronounced like a long "i").
I was sitting behind them with my guitar in hand and caught the correction. I turned to my brother, Howie, who also had his guitar, and grinned. We both knew that what Dad had said was, "Let's dance," when he meant to say, "Let us pray." There were more than a few smiles throughout the gathering that morning. Nevertheless, those who realized the struggle Dad was going through to learn their language were more than appreciative of his effort.
When the service ended, Ned did something no one could ever remember his doing in his whole lifetime. He turned to Dad, put his arms around him and said, "Brother Capener, I love you." It was a demonstration of the radical change that had taken place in him when the Lord Jesus Christ had transformed Ned Nusunginya from a man of hatred, vengeance and continual vitriol to a man who exhibited nothing but the agape love of the Lord.
Ned Nusunginya, Musher, Hunter, Whaler, Transformed Christian Seated with instruments, James Lampe, Howard Andersen, Steve Patkotak
The move of the Holy Spirit in Barrow began to take on exhibits and manifestations none of us had ever seen. One night there was a huge clamor outside the building. Nightly services had resumed after a hiatus during our absence from Barrow, and this was in the middle of the week. The church building was packed beyond capacity. People had been being baptized in the Holy Spirit in the midst of services and began to speak in tongues worshiping the Lord spontaneously. The heat from so many bodies packed into the place more than offset the fact that the main doors were open to accommodate folks who couldn't get in. They stood on the steps to the front of the church trying to see what was going on.
Those who couldn't see over the heads of people crammed into the entry way decided on another tack. They took some empty 50-gallon oil drums, laid 2x12 planks across them and made themselves an elevated platform on both sides of the church so they could stand up and see through the windows.
Alaska was not yet a state so we had a territorial police officer who made alternate rounds in Barrow (and other communities scattered throughout the arctic) on an exchange basis with a Canadian RCMP officer whose duties included Tuktoyaktuk, Inuvik, Aklavik and other villages in the western Canadian arctic. On the night in question, the noise and excitement was so great surrounding the church that the officer came to check things out. Whether the light appeared before he came, or whether it came while he was there, a great shaft of light appeared in the sky shining down directly over the church building.
The light was visible for miles around as a manifestation of what the Holy Spirit was doing. Stephen Patkotak, oldest son of Paul Patkotak (go back and read from the Coffee Break archives, PAUL, THE APOSTLE) had rebelled against the Lord, blaming God for the persecution his father had undergone at the hands of people scattered throughout the arctic including would-be "Christians." Steve was on a caribou hunting trip some 20 miles from Barrow when he saw the shaft of light. Despite his long-harbored anger against the Lord and everything "Christian," there was an instant "knowing" in his being that the Lord was beckoning him.
His wife, Jane, was in the service that night. She had come to know Jesus Christ while her husband was gone on his hunting trip and had been filled with the Holy Spirit. She was praying for Stephen's salvation. You probably realize this, but one does not cover 20 miles on tundra through snowdrifts with a dog team as though they're driving a snow machine capable of doing 50 or 60 miles an hour. I'm not sure Steve ever knew how it happened, but he turned his dog team towards the light and headed towards Barrow as fast as he could drive those dogs.
It was somewhere between 9:30 and 10:00 PM when he pulled up in front of the church with his team, drove a claw anchor into the ground to keep his dogs from running away. He'd made the trip in 90 minutes or thereabouts. With absolute determination, he plowed his way through the crowd of people, made his way down to the front of the church and dropped to his knees weeping. When he rose to his feet some 30 - 45 minutes later, the anger and rebellion against God was gone. His countenance was changed completely, and he glowed as though radiating inner light from himself.
Stephen had two brothers, Simeon and Billy. Billy lived in Wainwright where his father still lived. Simeon lived right next door to the church. In fact, if you look at the picture above of the church under construction, you'll see a house in the left side of the picture. That was Simeon's place. In fact, it belonged to a woman whose husband had died, and Simeon had simply taken up with her without the benefit of marriage. Simeon was a full-blown alcoholic who couldn't even get out bed without first taking a swig from his bottle of whiskey.
One morning the woman's (her name was Susan) daughter, Mary, came banging on the door of our place and crying out for help. She said that Simeon had an axe in hand and was trying to kill her mother. Dad walked over to the house, and as he stepped through the door, Simeon had the axe upraised. He turned to swing the axe against Dad instead. Dad stood there, raised his hand toward Simeon and said, "Peace, be still."
The axe dropped to the floor harmlessly. Simeon followed the axe to the floor, falling on his knees and crying. Dad began to pray softly, declaring the name and the blood of Jesus over Simeon and over the entire household. Before he left the house, Simeon and Susan had both received Jesus Christ as their Lord and Saviour. They were married soon thereafter.
Both Steve and Simeon Patkotak became integral parts of the church in Barrow. Both were musicians (both of them played the banjo) and began playing their instruments in what was quickly becoming a burgeoning string band.
There is still a lot to tell, and rather than get started on another story of God's grace today and the outpouring of the Holy Spirit that brought such change to the arctic, let's leave it here for today. Assuming that tomorrow doesn't turn out to be as busy as Wednesday was (that's why this is being posted on Thursday instead), we'll pick up this adventure Friday.
Lack is not supposed to be everlasting: it is a temporary situation until you can grow some Word seed to meet the need. God has given us the two things we need to get whatever we desire: Dominion and Seed.
Bless you.
Regner A. Capener
CAPENER MINISTRIES
RIVER WORSHIP CENTER
700 South 6th Street
Sunnyside, Washington 98944
(509) 837-4657
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