- Stealth Pilot
Says "God took my hands and pulled"
The United States stealth fighter pilot shot down
over Yugoslavia in March of this year says God
helped him survive. The pilot, who's name
was not mentioned in a report published by the
Air Force, ejected during a night mission on
March 27 deep in Serbian territory. The
pilot's F-117A Nighthawk had been hit by a
Yugoslav surface-to-air missile or anti-aircraft
fire, military sources said.
The ejection was violent, the
pilot said. "The one fragment of this
whole event I can't remember is pulling the
(ejection seat) handles. God took my hands
and pulled." The pilot landed in a
Yugoslav field where he hid in a culvert for six
hours until he was rescued by helicopters from
the Air Force's 16th Special Operations
Group. While in hiding, the pilot says he
saw flashing lights and reported that a search
dog came within 30 yards of his position, the Air
Force said.
The pilot had an American flag
folded under his flight suit. "For me,
it was representative of all the people who I
knew were praying," he said. "It
helped me not let go of hope. Hope gives
you strength and it gives you endurance."

From
underground Strategic Command, A
Chaplain's 'Cool Job' Reaches 30,000 ft.
By John Gaskin
BELLEVUE, Neb. (BP) -- Jason Peters ministers in a parish
that stretches from 30,000 feet above the earth to deep
within an underground command post.
He is living a childhood dream as a
chaplain at Offutt Air Force Base in Bellevue, Neb.
"As a child I had the privilege
of knowing retired Army Chaplain Arnold 'Smokey' Stover.
I was shocked when he told me the Army had pastors. My
father was a pastor and had served in Vietnam, but I had
no idea you could do both at the same time. My first
thought was, 'What a cool job!'"
Fifteen years later, Peters now has
that job.
Assigned to three different units at
Offutt, comprising more than 1,000 members, Peters is
considered their pastor and responsible to the wing
commander for meeting their spiritual needs.
"Within each assignment, I find
different avenues of ministry," said Peters, a 1998
graduate of Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary,
Kansas City, Mo.
One of the units is the J-6
Directorate of the United States Strategic Command, which
includes personnel from the Navy, Army, Marines and Coast
Guard. Peters received top-secret clearance so he could
minister in this large, underground industrial
environment.
"Because of the sensitive nature
of their work, coupled with the fact that there are six
generals/admirals in the complex, the stress level is
high and the outlets are few. As a chaplain, I am
sometimes able to help them work through issues about
which they can't even tell their spouse," Peters
said.
Another of his units is the 45th
Reconnaissance Squadron. "In order to connect with
the pilots, the navigators and the electronic warfare
officers or 'ravens,' I have been given the opportunity
to fly reconnaissance missions with them. Wearing their
uniform, understanding their language and being able to
identify with their jobs has opened some great doors of
ministry."
Peters works one night shift a week in
order to visit the maintenance personnel working on the
aircraft. "I encourage them in their faith and ask
them thought-provoking questions. It is amazing how open
they are to talking about issues of faith in the middle
of the night."
The 440 cops in the 55th Security
Forces Squadron are the third part of Peters' parish.
"After spending hours at flight line guard posts, at
the gates and riding around in patrol vehicles, I am
finally beginning to be recognized as one of them,"
he said.
They take advantage of guaranteed
confidentiality with a chaplain. "I have had the
opportunity to do marriage counseling, counseling for
work-related issues, sexual addiction and substance
abuse, and even responded to two active-duty suicides in
the last six months."
His ministry to the security forces
includes the confinement facility on base. "Just a
few weeks ago I was blessed with the opportunity to spend
over an hour with a man who was being court martialled on
charges related to child pornography. In that hour I was
able to share the gospel and pray with him."
The more normal side of Peter's
ministry includes weekly services on base for about 200
worshipers and leading the chapel youth group.
"My wife, Kimberly, and I have
also had numerous opportunities for ministry in our
neighborhood. Living in military housing has allowed us
to be involved in neighborhood Bible studies, barbecues
and some intense late-night chats.
"Military chaplains are simply
missionaries," Peters said. "We minister in a
world that is foreign to those who never served in the
military. We speak in acronyms, shop in BX's, PX's, NEX's
and commissaries. We often wear funny-looking clothes and
some of us even enjoy living in tents.
"I thank God for the doors he has
opened," Peters said, "and only hope that our
chaplains will faithfully respond to the task."
(Baptist Press, Tuesday, May 18, 1999)

Prayer Saved Them
Their plan went down
in the Pacific Ocean -- no small body of water. The
survivors, however, relied on prayer to survive.
Three Australians, a Swede, and others prayed with a
minister as they tried to swim for shore. "I
called out to people, 'if any of you have faith in God, I
would like to pray with you.' So we actually had a
prayer in the water," Australian minister Neil Watts
said. After six hours of swimming in the dark,
through jellyfish infested waters, through heavy rain,
and against a strong current, the men came ashore in Port
Vila. Seven others are still missing in the crash
of the Twin Otter Aircraft. (Religion Today, Tuesday, May
11, 1999)

Faith At Gunpoint: Cassie
Bernall's Story and More
By Art Toalston
LITTLETON, Colo. (BP)--As Jesus fed the 5,000 with five
loaves of bread and two fish, "Cassie fed the world
with one word, 'Yes,'" said Dave McPherson, youth
minister at West Bowles Community Church, Littleton,
Colo., the Sunday after Cassie Bernall was slain at
Columbine High School.
Cassie's "Yes" came in
response to the question, "Do you believe in
God?" posed by one of the two deranged classmates
who shot her to death, along with 11 other students and a
teacher, and wounding nearly two dozen others, before
taking their own lives in a April 20 melee at the
1,900-student school.
"Yes, I believe in
God," Cassie, 17, told the gun- and pipe
bomb-wielding gunman.
"Why?" he mused
rhetorically without giving Cassie a chance to respond
before pulling the trigger.
"Bernall entered the
Columbine High School library to study during lunch. She
left a martyr," the Denver Rocky Mountain News
stated.
Cassie's answer came after a
long pause.
"I think she knew she was
going to die if she said that," one of her friends,
Kevin Koeniger, a member of Cassie's youth group at West
Bowles Community Church, told National Public Radio's
"Morning Edition."
"That's why she waited so
long. She didn't wait determining whether to say yes or
no. But she knew that if she said yes, she would
die," Koeniger said.
"I think if there's one way
to die, a good way of doing it is dying for your
faith," said another of the 200-member youth group,
her name indistinguishable on the NPR broadcast. "I
think she's awesome."
"I can't even explain like
the joy that comes from my knowing a person that would
die for my Lord," another friend, Erika Dendorfer,
told NPR. "I'm sad that she had to go in the way
that she did with two killers, but I'm happy that she
went dying for Christ."
The intent of the gunmen
(Columbine students Eric Harris, 18, and Dylan Kelbold,
17) to kill a Christian "backfired," said a
youth whose name also was indistinguishable on the NPR
broadcast. "People around the world have heard
about this, the girl who died a martyr," he said.
Cassie's witness for Christ in
death indeed has gone global. One of the earliest reports
of her fateful affirmation was on CNN's "Larry King
Live." In addition to the NPR segment, she was
described on ABC's "20/20" newsmagazine April
26 as a "modern-day martyr" who "refused
to renounce her faith." The headline of a story
about her death in The Boston Globe April 24 read,
"A martyr amid the madness," while The
Washington Post also employed the concept of martyrdom in
an April 27 story.
The Globe noted, "Accounts
of the final moments of Cassie's life echo with the
history of early Christendom, when a profession of faith
could be a fatal act."
Cassie spoke of her faith in a
youth group video just two days before her death.
"You really can't live
without Christ. It's, like, impossible to really have a
really true life without him," she said.
In living as a Christian, she
said, "I just try to not contradict myself, to get
rid of all the hypocrisy and just live for Christ."
Nearly 2,500 people attended
Cassie's funeral April 26 at West Bowles Community
Church.
"Cassie went to a martyr's
death," pastor George Kirsten told the mourners,
"and we're going to celebrate that because she's in
the martyr's hall of fame."
McPherson, the youth minister,
said in his message, "What the church has talked
about for 2,000 years, what every church in this world
has talked about on a daily basis, Cassie, you did
it."
Several years earlier, Cassie
had been a troubled middle-school student who, as The
Denver Post put it, was "enthralled by witchcraft,
suicide and a view of life so dark that her desperate
parents dragged her" to meet with McPherson.
McPherson told The Post he well
remembers meeting with the sullen youth who spoke in
monosyllables. "There's no hope for that girl,"
he admitted thinking afterward. "Not our kind of
hope.''
A few weeks later, however,
Bernall hurried up to him after a Sunday service.
"You'll never believe what happened,'' she said of
her new faith in Christ.
Among other vignettes from Cassie's
life and death:
Attending her funeral were
numerous members of Victory Outreach, a storefront church
in one of Denver's roughest neighborhoods, where Cassie
and her friends shared dinner every few weeks with
prostitutes and drug addicts who are part of the
inner-city congregation.
Cassie's younger brother, Chris, found
an almost-prophetic poem the night of her death which she
had written the previous Sunday, The Boston Globe
reported. Cassie wrote:
"Now I have given up on everything else -- I have
found it
to be the only way to really know
Christ and to experience the
mighty power that brought
him back to life again, and to find
out what it means to suffer and to
die with him. So, whatever it takes
I will be one who lives in the fresh
newness of life of those who are alive from the
dead."
Cassie had planned to cut her corn
silk-colored hair that hung halfway down her back
"and give it to someone who makes wigs for kids who
are going through chemo," her aunt, Kayleen Bernall,
told The Denver Post. Cassie had planned to have it cut
"really short," her aunt said, quoting Cassie
as saying, "I want enough hair for two or three
kids, as many kids as possible."
Cassie had wanted to go to medical school, become a
doctor and do medical work in England and Scotland, her
aunt said. Cassie also wanted to become better at
the nature photographs she loved to take.
Incidentally, Cassie was not the
lone Christian killed at Columbine High April 20.
According to the Internet site
ReligionToday, Rachel Joy Scott, 17, who was also killed
in the library, had led a weekly prayer and Bible study
group of fellow teens the past year and a half at Orchard
Road Christian Center, an Assemblies of God
congregation. The ReligionToday report was drawn
from the Assemblies of God news service.
"We consider her [Scott] to
be a Christian American martyr," the church's youth
minister, Barry Palser, told The Washington Post.
Her April 24 funeral was attended by nearly 2,000 people.
Rachel, a fun-loving participant in drama and forensics,
had told friends she was considering graduating early to
travel with a Christian drama team and perhaps later to
become a missionary or to work with troubled youth, the
Denver Rocky Mountain News reported. And she had
promised her prom date, Nick Baumgartner, to give up her
occasional smoking.
John Tomlin, 16, another victim,
attended a Baptist church twice a week to participate in
a youth ministry, Boyd Evens, his pastor, said, according
to ReligionToday. Tomlin had traveled to a small town in
Mexico last year as part of a ministry that helped build
a house for a poor family who had been living in a shack.
He had planned to enlist in the Army after graduation.
Two of the victims, teacher
William "Dave" Sanders and student Danny
Rohrbough, were shot while helping others escape from the
gunmen.
Sanders, whose April 26 funeral was at
Littleton's Trinity Christian Center, herded students to
safety when gunshots broke out in the school cafeteria,
The Denver Post recounted. Sanders, 47, who had taught at
Columbine 24 years, then went upstairs to aid other
students, dragging one who had been wounded in the leg to
safety, before being shot twice in the chest. According
to the Associated Press, Sanders staggered into a
classroom where students tore off their T-shirts and
pressed them to his wounds. They pulled out
Sanders' wallet and held it open so he could see pictures
of his wife and three daughters. His dying words were,
"Tell my girls I love them."
Rohrbough, 15, whose April 26 funeral
was at Littleton's Grace Presbyterian Church, was shot in
the back while holding open a door to let others escape
from the gunfire. His lifeless body was among the first
TV images broadcast live to the nation the afternoon of
the tragedy.
The church's pastor, Dwight R.
Blackstock, said Rohrbough might still be alive "if
he'd have made a little different choice. Yet he chose to
stay there and hold the door for others so that they
might go out before him and make their way to safety.
They made it and Danny didn't," according to an
account of the funeral in the Denver Rocky Mountain News.
Blackstock noted that Rohrbough's heroic act, "in
the last few moments of his life on this earth, was the
kind of thing Jesus holds up as an example to us
all. Jesus said, 'Greater love has no man than
this, that he lay down his life for his friends.'
"That's what Danny
did." (Baptist Press, Tuesday, April 27 1999)

- Overcoming
Impossible Barriers
- God knows our heart
when others, and even we ourselves, doubt
ability. Peter no doubt must have felt that way
when he not once, not twice, but thrice denied
our blessed Lord Jesus Christ (cf Luke
22:54b-62). I know that feeling very well. Having
resigned a pastorate only 10 months after being
called, I not only know the failure Peter felt
but the joy and renewal he felt when Jesus
restored.
-
Ministers enter a pastorate thinking they will be
there for years. I was no exception to that. But
ten months after I began, I was finished. The
afternoon of my last Sunday I sat in my living
room well aware of the great and seemingly
impossible to overcome barriers that faced me and
my family as we began the long and often grueling
process of finding a church. Looking back on it
now, I see I had it all wrong. There were even
more barriers than I had first imagined. There
would be even longer days than I felt were before
me. There were days that I cried even harder than
I had previously. Still, God was there -- in even
grander ways than I first imagined.
- To
my great surprise and relief, churches began to
contact me right away -- that very night, in
fact. But one by one, God closed most of those
doors. One door, however, remained steadfastly
open. A member of the state convention's
executive board had shared my name with a church
not far from where my family now live. In fact, I
had invited them to visit the Sunday before I
resigned but they refused.
- I
filled the pulpit for a dear friend and fellow
minister in my hometown two weeks later. The
pastoral search committee from two churches were
there. At their request, my wife and I
interviewed with one of the churches in a Sunday
School class following worship. The children were
on their best behavior -- thank the Lord!
-
Inside the Sunday School class, something
miraculous happened. My wife and I found
ourselves in the midst of friends not strangers;
genuine brothers and sisters in Christ who
earnestly longed for God's Word to set the
direction and path for their lives. More
interviews followed, this time at the church
itself. We met with the Deacons, the Finance
Committee, the Personnel Committee, and of course
the Pastoral Search Committee. Our hearts raced
with great joy and excitement with each meeting
and every telephone call. God appeared to be
moving us in their direction -- but we wanted to
be sure.
- A
month later, in mid-March, I boldly proclaimed
God's Word before an exceptional gathering of
members and their families. The response was
overwhelming! Many were moved to make kingdom
building decisions that would affect the rest of
their lives. The altar was almost completely
covered with people on their knees!
-
The church voted the following Sunday -- a bit
unusual where I come from but discovering God's
will was my primary concern. I think I prayed
more that week than I had in years. "Close
the door, Lord" I prayed, "close it now
so I will know if you want me to serve you
elsewhere." The door not only stayed open --
it swung open even farther!
- I
recently began a new chapter in my life and
ministry for God. My lingering feelings of
unworthiness and uselessness are now gone,
replaced by a new fire to not repeat the past
ever again. God had overcome the mammoth barriers
that separated me from His kingdom's service.
Indeed, like Peter, He had restored me when I was
unworthy to be restored.
- My
story is not unique. God wants to restore you
too. It matters not what you may have done or in
what you may have failed, God loves you enough to
take on whatever obstacle presents itself in your
life. And He's not only willing to take them on,
He has the power to overcome them. I stand ready
to help wherever I can. Because I love Him and
you . . .

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