Another
Coffee Break:
Point of No Return
February 27, 2015
'Mornin'
Folks! Had a good week so far? Great!
I'm continuing on reprising a few stories that go back ten years or more
when I first began publishing these
Coffee Breaks. I'm going to return to a
rather casual, kinda-round-the-table, relaxed way of writing (conversational
style, OK?) for this -- and next week's -- Coffee Break. This week's Coffee Break deals with a few
hair raising adventures.
You all know what a point of no
return is, don’t you? Where you’ve
committed yourself to some course of action or direction, and suddenly
something happens – maybe some event that means life or death – and you have no
choice but to proceed forward on your committed course?
Boy, do I have some stories and some
crazy experiences on that subject! Let’s
see where this discussion takes us today.
Got your coffee poured, yet?
Hurry up!
Traveling to Kotzebue,
Alaska one day from Fairbanks (this was a bunch of years ago) in
one of those Fairchild F-27’s – you “old folks” remember them, the upper-wing
planes with a pair of turboprop engines – we lost an engine. In case you don’t know the geography,
Kotzebue is roughly 450 miles west-northwest of Fairbanks
out on one of the western tips of Alaska in
the Bering Sea. Funny thing, though. We were 235 – 240 miles into our flight. That’s just over halfway.
Take a look at a map, will you. Except for some native communities, fishing
villages and the like, there’s a whole lot of nothing in that stretch! Nothing, meaning no landing strips or
airports big enough to accommodate an F-27 – especially one flown by Wien
Alaska Airlines. You had to have lived
there and flown Wien to appreciate that comment. When Noel Wien started his airline back at
the end of the biplane era, he flew freight and used whatever space he had left
for passengers.
Things never changed for as many
years as that airline existed in Alaska. Even when the first 737’s came out, Wien
would put a cargo buffer about midway through the aircraft. It was movable, and – depending on the amount
of cargo or freight being carried – the plane would carry anywhere from 20 – 60
passengers. The freight often matched
the entire load capacity, and passengers made our weight exceed the aircraft’s
rating. I think the only plane in Wien’s
history that never had a problem with the freight – passenger thing was the
DC-3 – the WWII Gooney Bird. That plane
just never seemed to have a weight problem.
‘Course it flew like a Mack Truck, too!
Took forever to get it moving, but once it was, look out!
Anyway, I digress. We’d just passed the flight’s point of no
return on the way to Kotzebue when we lost an engine. This F-27 flight wasn’t any different from
any other Wien flight: it was way overloaded.
So what do you think happens when
you are flying an overloaded plane and you lose one of your two engines? Hmmmm…….
Anybody? Yup. You got it!
The plane starts to come down.
You lose altitude.
And we started dropping. Normally configured, the F-27 probably held
45 – 50 passengers. With the freight and
cargo taking up most of the cabin, we had perhaps a dozen folks on that flight.
I looked out the window and saw the
engine sputtering, blowing smoke and all that, and finally the prop
stopped. The pilot came over the
intercom to advise us that we had lost an engine (Duhhhh. I wonder if anybody noticed!) and that there
were no other airports in range. We were
committed to Kotzebue.
This was one of those times when
you’d better be prayed up! The pilot was
fighting to keep the plane aloft long enough for us to reach Kotzebue, knowing
that it was really going to be close. I
saw some folks that day who probably hadn’t talked to the Lord in years – if
ever! They were going through their
gyrations and gymnastics, making the sign of the cross, lips moving, faces
etched with the fear of death – you know the program!
I sat back in my seat not meaning to
laugh or chuckle at what I was seeing, but having perfect peace in my whole
being. “Lord, from what you’ve told me
throughout the years, I know my time hasn’t come, so if you have to send a
couple of angels to hold up the wings and keep us aloft until we reach
Kotzebue, then do it – in Jesus’ name.”
It was almost eerie. But it was a peaceful experience knowing that
my life – our lives – were totally in the Lord’s care, and that there wasn’t
one blessed thing anyone of us could do about the situation.
You see, I had passed the point of
no return many years before. I’d
committed myself to obeying and following the Lord Jesus Christ , no matter
what He asked – regardless of the consequences.
There was no turning back. That’s
the greatest point of no return any person can pass in their life. Once you’ve passed that point, you’re
committed. Whatever comes – whether for
life or death – there is no changing things!
You can’t alter the circumstances.
And it doesn't matter! You simply
follow the Lord wherever He leads.
Watching us drop closer and closer
to the ground, I knew my fellow-passengers were near panic. I just smiled at them and said, “It’s
OK. The Lord has it all under
control. We’ll make it to Kotzebue just
fine!” I don’t know how much difference
those words made to anyone, but they seemed to take some assurance in my
confidence.
50 miles out from Kotzebue, we were
less than 500 feet above the ground.
Good thing the terrain was so flat!
The pilot radioed ahead, of course, and the airport folks had Kotzebue’s
one ambulance and one fire truck waiting for our arrival. We lined up for the runway with maybe 250 –
300 feet of altitude. The pilot landed
the plane smooth as silk on that one engine.
No bumping. No skidding. No sideways jerking. ‘Course, there wasn’t a bad pilot in that
entire airline. Those Wien Alaska
Airline pilots were the best anywhere in the world. We came in as though everything was
fine. It was, too. The Lord sent His angels to carry the plane
to its destination.
Then there was that experience when
I was traveling to Jackson Hole, Wyoming from our office in Salt Lake City. It was the winter of 1969, as I recall. I was the President of Intermountain
Electronics Corporation. The company VP,
Bill, was riding with me in our GMC van.
We‘d were headed to Jackson to sign a contract to maintain some
electronic equipment for a school.
In those days, U.S. Highway 89 was
no freeway. Still isn’t, for the most
part! The road had about six to eight
inches of fresh snow, and there was one set of tracks where a number of
vehicles had been. It had warmed up just
enough to form a crust, making it all but impossible to get out of the rut in
an emergency.
You could see a couple of places
where trucks had pulled off to allow other vehicles to pass, but they were few
and far between. Mostly, it was just one
set of tracks – ruts – right down the center of the highway.
We were somewhere halfway between
Logan and Garden City, Utah (according to my recollection) when we saw a
bridge. The bridge was elevated over the
creek, of course, and the road inclined upward to the bridge. It blocked our view so that you couldn’t see
anything coming down the road. We hadn’t
seen any traffic for quite awhile, and consequently were feeling OK about
driving 45 – 50 miles per hour, the ruts notwithstanding.
The van was handling just fine – no
rocking from side to side, none of the kinds of problems you would encounter if
the ruts were really narrow. There was
just one problem. It was starting to
warm up, and there was a glaze on the pavement.
You might call it black ice except for the fact that you really couldn’t
see the pavement.
As we start up the rise to the
bridge, we can suddenly see another car coming at us, maybe 500 feet away. No problem if you’re not doing 50 and not in
ruts. Hitting the brakes and trying to
get out of the ruts was a joke! We just
kept right on going as though the van was programmed to drive in a straight
line.
Know what? We’d passed the point of no return. Our speed, coupled with the ruts and the
slight glaze on the roadway meant we were committed to at least a quarter-mile
or better in front of us before we could stop.
The guy coming at us was doing
exactly what we were doing. He hadn’t
seen any traffic, probably since he left Garden City, and he was cruising along
like he had good sense. He was way past his
point of no return.
Got the picture? Two vehicles pointed directly at each other,
both going somewhere close to 50 miles per hour, 500 feet or so apart, and the
stopping zone about 250 feet the other side of the approaching car. Man, have you ever passed the point of no
return!
Even with instantaneous reflexes,
there’s no time to do anything. The
wheel doesn’t respond when you try to get out of the rut. Hitting the brakes is almost like hitting the
accelerator.
As we approached each other, I could
see the terror in the eyes of the fellow who was driving the oncoming car. It all happened so fast there was hardly time
to blink. My business partner, Bill, the
company VP, was a Mormon who wasn’t used to miracles, and sure wasn’t used to
shouting, “Jesus!” in an emergency. (No
offense meant to any of you readers who are Mormons. That was just where Bill was.)
I did what I’d been trained to do by
my mother in an emergency. We’d had
plenty of practice living in the arctic, and I’d had plenty of practice in
traveling with my mother and my brother as we raised money to build
churches. We had experienced some very
close calls on the highways and even had an event in which the front end of the
car Mom was driving came apart, and resulted in the car flipping over some
three times or more.
“JESUS!!”
The word exploded from my lips. It wasn’t a curse word. It was one of those split-second prayers when
you don’t have time for, “Dear Heavenly Father, I'm coming to you in my hour of
need. I’m in trouble and I need your
help and intervention right now! Get us
out of this mess in Jesus’ Name, Amen.”
By the time you pray all those words, it’s all over with. You better KNOW the Lord in those
circumstances. Formal prayers don't cut
it! Come to think of it, formal prayers
have no business in the life of believers who have a genuine, intimate
relationship with Jesus Christ.
Like I said, we’d long passed the
point of no return. So had I in my
relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ.
I was almost standing on the
brakes. “JESUS!”
The
van came to a stop. So did the
approaching car. Except for one
thing. We were 250 – 300 feet apart –
THE OTHER SIDE OF EACH OTHER!
It
happened in an instant. We literally
passed through each other like something out of a Sci-Fi movie. This was no science fiction! Just like Jesus passed through walls and
doors by dematerializing and then rematerializing, we passed through each other. In actual fact, we had shifted
dimensions. We had transitioned instantly
into a parallel dimension provided by Holy Spirit.
You
see, this sort of thing was very natural for Jesus! He was naturally supernatural. Know what?
If we are in Christ, and He is in us, so are we. We should come to expect this kind of thing
as natural! Supernaturally natural!
Bill
looked at me. He was white as a
sheet. “What just happened?” he
asked. I was so stunned myself at what
had just transpired that I only had a one word answer, “Jesus.” Guess I shouldn't have been so surprised, but
I have to admit; it was the first time in my life I'd experienced this kind of
thing. It turned out not to be the last
time, either! Guess that experience will
have to wait for another time.
We
got out of the van and looked back. The
driver of the other car was standing outside his car looking at us and
scratching his head and wiping his brow.
I'll never forget the look of horror on his face as we meshed into and
through his car. It was one of those
split second things you see that leaves an indelible impression. Standing outside his car in the snow, he
didn’t really know what had just happened, and he was wondering if he was still
alive or if this was some kind of strange dream.
It
wasn’t. It was real. OK -- for Bill and for the other driver, it
was surreal! (smile) We got back in the van and headed down the
road. It gave me a fabulous chance to
talk to Bill about the Lord Jesus Christ in a way he’d never heard. He was listening, too!
We’d
passed the point of no return in a life and death situation and returned to
talk about it. Kinda like the Apollo 13
astronauts. Remember them?
Apollo
13….well, I don’t have time to go there today, but most of you know that story
anyway. The astronauts had a major
disaster with their spacecraft – after they were committed to a trip to the
moon at several times the velocity of a speeding bullet. The accident happened when they were past the
point of no return. And they made it
back, miraculously, by the grace of God.
And
that’s another story. Maybe we’ll get to
talk about that another time. I’ve got
some more of those point-of-no-return stories that happened in Utah, but they’ll wait,
too.
Anyway,
have a spectacular day! Ohh…..and if you
haven’t passed the point of no return with Jesus, better take care of it –
NOW!! Don’t let any daisies grow under
your feet. It just might be too late!
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
Regner A. Capener
CAPENER MINISTRIES
CAPENER MINISTRIES
RIVER WORSHIP CENTER
Sunnyside, Washington 98944
Sunnyside, Washington 98944
Email Contact: Admin@RiverWorshipCenter.org
Our book, A
Tale of Two Brides, published by Destiny Image, is available on
Amazon.com as an E-book: http://www.amazon.com/Tale-Two-Brides-Relationship-ebook/dp/B00BSV6HZC/ref=sr_1_8?ie=UTF8&qid=1363139096&sr=8-8&keywords=A+Tale+of+Two+Brides#_
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