Another
Coffee Break:
Supernatural Maturity, Part 8
May 8, 2015
In this week's Coffee Break, while we continue with the same
theme we began last week in dealing with being God's peacemakers, I'd like to
share with you a story from my early childhood years -- a story which marked
the beginning of my parents' miraculous years of ministry in Alaska -- a story
which illustrates the authority that we have.
Once again, here is what Jesus said:
Matthew 5:9:
Blessed are the peacemakers: for they
shall be called the children of God.
And
-- again -- as we did last week, here is an amplified translation of that
verse.
“Blessed and highly favored by the
King [of Kings] are those who know what it means to have the peace of God —
those who pursue with all diligence that peace in their being and in their
environment — for God will cause them to be known and referred to as His mature
and responsible sons (to whom He has entrusted His business.” (RAC Translation and Amplification)
We
talked last week about Jesus being out in the storm — in this case, a virtual
tornado or large waterspout on the Sea of Galilee (and this was no ordinary
storm) — and simply commanding, “Peace,
be still!” That storm died
instantly.
In
the summer of 1944, my father was at sea during the seven-week fishing season,
hoping to make enough money with the fish he caught to pay off the thousand
dollar debt on the church building he had built in Ilwaco, Washington.
Ilwaco
was known as a salmon fishing port, but this year the Japanese current had
swung way off course and was bringing Albacore Tuna into the pacific
waters. Dad was not a fisherman at all
by trade, and in fact had never fished commercially in his life. He was, by all accounts, a “landlubber” — a
farm boy from Minnesota and North Dakota — whom God had called to Alaska. Ilwaco was just a stop on the way to Alaska,
and 1944 was the year for the family to make the move north.
Dad
felt that he could not leave for Alaska and leave an unpaid debt behind on the
church he had built in this fishing community.
Having no other means at hand, he convinced a local cannery owner from
Raymond, Washington to loan him a boat so that he could try his hand at
fishing. When the fishing season opened,
the cannery owner reluctantly provided Dad with a 30-foot boat. The boat had no cabin so he was at the whim
of the elements.
That
first week of the fishing season saw God provide a catch of fish that shocked
both the cannery owner, and the professional fisherman from the area. The owner decided he’d underestimated this
landlubber-preacher, and provided him with a 50-foot boat with a cabin to
finish the season.
1944
Fishing Season
Week
after week after week, the size of Dad’s catch of fish amazed the fishing
community and the Associated Press decided to cover this crazy
“Landlubber-Preacher-Fisherman.
Without
getting into the whole story here, we come to the seventh and final week of the
fishing season. Dad had been routinely
fishing a hundred or so miles to the west of Astoria. The seasoned fisherman saw the makings of a
big storm at sea and decided it was time to head back into port.
The
lack of experience at sea left Dad with no indicators that anything was amiss
with the weather, and by late Wednesday the seas were tossing the boat like a
cork. By Thursday morning, the boat was
cracking and making noises such that he knew this just couldn’t continue.
The
waves had increased to the point that they were fifty and sixty feet high, and
frequently breaking over the top of the boat, submerging it momentarily before
it bobbed back to the surface.
In
his cabin, Dad prayed and said, “Lord, I know you didn’t call me to Alaska just
to have me drown at sea.” He got to his
feet stood at the cabin door and waited for one of the big waves to pass. He opened the door, ran out on the deck and
stretched his hand over the water.
“In
the name of Jesus, I command you, Peace!
Be Still!”
Then
he ran back into the cabin and waited.
Within twenty minutes the storm had ceased and the waters were glassy
calm. The storm had blown him more than
two hundred miles out to sea — well beyond the range of his ability to return
to shore. A gentle breeze sprang up and
began to blow him back towards the Oregon coast.
Meanwhile,
the fish began to bite. Dad had no money
to purchase professional fishing gear so he had simply strung out a bunch of
lines over the side of the boat.
Suddenly all of the lines were tugging and he began to pull in one fish
after another. Hour after hour after
hour he pulled in the fish. Before long
the hold was completely full, so he began throwing fish in the cabin.
Back
at port, the Ilwaco fishermen came to visit Mom and said, “Mrs. Capener, we’re
really sorry about the loss of your husband at sea. If you like, we’ll begin making preparations
for his funeral.” They meant well, but
had no idea what God was doing, and the kind of display He was about to put on
for them.
You
see, the overwhelming majority of the fishermen had already begun the process
of cleaning their boats and gear and putting things away for the season. They recognized the storm as a killer storm
and had no intention of being caught in it.
Besides, they had all had pretty good seasons and were not going to take
any chances.
For
the commercial fishermen, and for the people of Ilwaco, Dad had lost his life
in the storm. There had been no sign of
him since the storm hit. He had no radio
gear on board and no way to let folks know that he was still alive.
Mom,
likewise knew that God wasn’t going to pull the plug on them after having
called them to Alaska and she put off the fishermen’s offer saying, “Thanks,
but we’ll wait. God has everything well
in control.”
Early
Saturday, the well-meaning fishermen made one more try. “Mrs. Capener, really! You have to face reality! No one could have survived that storm. Please let us begin making preparations for
the funeral.”
Her
answer was short and sweet. “No, we’ll
wait.”
Late
Saturday afternoon, someone spotted a dot on the horizon and by the time Dad
made it into port, much of the community was there to greet him. They couldn’t believe their eyes!
Dad
was standing knee-deep in fish. The
Albacore Tuna covered the decks, were covering the floor of the cabin, over and
under his bunk and camp stove, and all around the wheel house. The decks were riding not more than four or
five inches above the water line.
When
he stepped out on the deck and commanded, “Peace,” not only did the storm die,
but nature cooperated with the command.
The elements were “set in order”.
The
breezes blew him back into port so that he didn’t have to use up his fuel
supply, and the fish began to bite. It
proved to be a record catch of fish and a record-setting season that has never
been broken to this day. 39,000 pounds
of tuna, all caught by hand during the seven-week fishing season, and it
brought Dad $6.300.00. The debt on the
church was paid off and we were able to move to Alaska in October of that year
for ministry to begin among the native villages.
Albacore Tuna from the 1944 Fishing Miracle
We
like to sing the verses from Philippians 4:7-8, but consider them in the
context of what we are sharing today.
Philippians 4:7-9:
And the peace of God, which passeth
all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus. Finally, brethren, whatsoever things are
true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just,
whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely,
whatsoever things are of good report; if there be any virtue, and
if there be any praise, think on these things. Those things, which ye have both learned, and
received, and heard, and seen in me, do: and the God of peace shall be with
you.
When
the peace of God commands our minds, our thoughts, and the words which come out
of our mouths, we become “peacemakers.”
Peace surrounds us. We bring
peace with us wherever we go.
I
should have included verse 6 in this passage which goes like this:
Be careful for nothing; but in
everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be
made known unto God.
That
word, “careful,” is a translation of the Greek word, merimnao, which means: to be troubled with
cares, to be fretful, to be anxious and worried.
So
many people have made their own needs and crises the most important thing in
their lives, and they’ve put their trust in money, in “stuff”, in homes, in
family, or in any number of things that ARE NOT the Lord Jesus Christ.
There
is no peace in them, and they are not allowing the peace of God to rule in
their hearts and minds and thoughts — or any part of their being.
Over
the past months, Della and I have fielded literally hundreds of phone calls
from people in various stages of utter panic — some people calling three and
four and five times a day looking for some morsel of information that would put
them at peace. There’s a huge difference
between getting some kind of information that will satiate worry and actually
having God’s peace dictate our thoughts and conversation.
For
us to be “peacemakers,” we must first allow the peace of God to rule in
us. Once again, peace is a ruler. God’s peace has the ability to overrule every
conceivable concern, fretfulness or worry that the Enemy would like for us to
focus on.
The
Word of God is replete with examples of the power and stupendous authority that
the peace of God — the peace of the Lord Jesus Christ — can and does exercise
for those who yield their own minds, thought processes and conversations to the
mind of Christ. Let me wrap up this
discussion with a translation that I did from II Corinthians 10:4-6.
For the weapons and instruments of our
war and executed actions [against Satan] do not have their origins and [weak,
impotent] operation in natural flesh and human abilities, but they are
skillful, potent and powerful – like dynamite – through God to the
demolition and extinction of all fortified and guarded places of opinions in opposition,
Bringing down violently and demolishing (to total extinction) all mental
reasonings and thought processes, and every mental barrier or arrogant and
self-elevated attitude that justifies itself in opposition to the knowledge of
God; bringing into captivity and making a prisoner every perception of the
intellect and every mental purpose or determination to the compliance and
submission of Christ and His anointing [in the same way that He complied with
the will and desire of the Father]; And holding in readiness and preparedness
the [spiritual] fitness to vindicate and punish all refusal to hear what the
Spirit is saying when your attentive and obedient submission has been satisfied
fully and executed. (RAC Translation and Amplification)
Next
week we will talk about the blessing of persecution! OK, don't look at me in that tone of
voice. I'm serious! But you'll have to wait until next week to
see what I mean.
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). Once again, the number to call for healing is
(805) 399-1000. Then enter the access
code: 124763#.
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 (559)
726-1300, and the access code is 308640#.
We hope to make these gatherings available by Skype or Talk Fusion
before long.
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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