Saturday, November 29, 2008

Are We Going Up—Or Seizing Up?

 
Article 2 in the "Men or Mules" Series

Maybe the prop would somehow manage to drag the whole heap of junk across the sand on its skids until they ran into a water point… 
 
“Why do we have to risk getting airborne? We could just taxi out all the way!” 
 
“I don’t think you mean it seriously, Mr. Towns. I should remind you that the coolant system is designed to operate chiefly at cruising airspeed. Therefore, the engine would overheat and seize up within ten miles or so, leaving us a hundred and fifty miles short of the nearest oasis.”
* * *
 
Who are these people? Why are they (apparently) stranded in the great Sahara with a junked airplane? Will they ever reach a “water point” alive? 
 
Sorry, King’s Courier has no space to run adventure stories. Read The Flight of the Phoenix, by Elleston Trevor, 1964. (No—not the movie!! The book!
 
But, the point is that Frank Towns—former pilot of the “heap of junk”—seems to have momentarily forgotten the key difference between a dune buggy and an airplane: that the latter is designed for three-dimensional travel. (Translation: flight!) It simply cannot “taxi out” for any significant distance without self-destructing. It must go up! It was created to go up. 
 
You may have guessed by now that this isn’t about aeronautics. So, then… As a disciple of Jesus, there is nothing more vital for me than to hear from the Master. I need His guidance with day-to-day decisions, and more importantly, I need a revelation of the unique plans and roles, the unique mission, that He has for me. 
 
But all too often, I bounce along the desert floor with only a vague sense of His will, blundering into every dune and sandstorm along the way. I must go up!—get above the blowing sand and find clear guidance for the journey. I was created for three-dimensional travel. And yet...days turn into weeks, weeks into years, and altitude is still zero. Just when I think I’ve found God’s will...oo-pphhhhh! Another mouthful of sand! Failure...Stress...Anger...I’m seizing up! 
 
David, the “man after God’s own heart”, knew something about connecting with the purposes of God. His 32nd psalm contains many precious keys to finding God’s will, but perhaps the most precious of all is stated matter-of-factly in verse 8: “I will guide you with My eye.” 
 
What! God’s eye...as a GPS? 
 
Actually, eyes speak volumes. Remember when you would stare into your true love’s eyes, drinking from each other’s soul, dreaming of all that the future held? But, somewhere in those first few years of marriage—between the dog throwing up and that tree limb crashing through the kitchen window—somehow you lost eye contact—and soul contact as well. (Hey! Why not try staring into those eyes again—on a regular basis? You might just fall back in love...and rekindle some of those old dreams, too.) 
 
So then, if our own schlocky human souls can meld through the simple act of eye contact, think how much more glorious it is to look our Heavenly Father in the eye! 
 
Mark tells us that Jesus “looked at [the Rich Young Ruler] and loved him,” then gave him a simple three-step plan to realize his destiny with God. But Richie’s “face fell”, and he trudged away. By neglecting to make eye contact, he had failed to see the Savior reaching out to him—entreating him to connect with his destiny by trading his measly net worth for God’s eternal love. 
 
There’s one problem with eye contact: it requires time. Staring into my honey’s eyes means I might miss the early bus and get to work three minutes late. (...or, maybe even skip work altogether!) 
 
And, staring into God’s eyes means quieting my soul for a few minutes—maybe even hours—of all the things I want to “talk at Him” about. It means worshiping, loving on Him, fanning the flame of my “first love”, and then... listening to Him! 
 
No more can I expect to pay Jesus a two-minute visit, hoping He’ll toss me a bit of fortune-cookie guidance to escape the latest sand trap. But, through consistent time spent in His presence, as we begin to make eye contact, He will pilot my life above the shifting dunes of futility, and guide me toward His glorious purposes. I’m going up! 
 
Turn your eyes upon Jesus, 
Look full in His wonderful face, 
And the things of earth will grow strangely dim 
In the light of His glory and grace. 
—Helen H. Lemmel, 1922

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Originally published in King's Courier, a bimonthly magazine, 11/29/2008. 

Copyright © Brad Fenichel 2008 All Rights Reserved

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Brother, Can You Spare a Minute?


Back in print after 68 years!

Brad Fenichel, working with Saddle Mountain Communications and MinuteOfPrayer.org, has brought this classic back to press. It contains a new foreword by Alan and Stewart Dakers (the author's grandsons) and a preface by Brad Fenichel.

For more information, visit MinuteOfPrayer.org.

This article by Brad Fenichel, which appears below in its original form, was first published in the November, 2008 issue of King's Courier, a bimonthly magazine. It has since been modified (to suit available space) and reprinted by a number of publications. Used by Permission.
By Brad Fenichel
"I shan't come through this struggle, you know.”
Wellesley, startled out of his own dark musings, studied the barely discernible bedroll that was the source of his fellow officer’s voice. But, it was a different voice—uncanny, strained.
“What? Buck up now, mate! You’ve never been the morbid sort. Just think of all the scrapes we’ve been through together, and, well…you know...here we are!”
A full minute of silence ensued, punctuated only by the companions’ raspy breath against the brittle chill. They sat in a meager lean-to perched in the Palestine hills. It was 1917, the 8th of December. Tomorrow’s battle would be the long-awaited and tediously planned “final move” to wrest Jerusalem from the Turks. So much had gone amiss in this Great War, but portents were favorable—at least to the hopeful—for a decisive victory at sunrise. If you can call it a sunrise, in this icy, rain-drenched winter! Wellesley caught himself shivering. This won’t do, now!
"I shan't come through this struggle, I say. Like millions before me, it will be my destiny to go on. But you will survive, Wellesley. And, when that time comes, remember us.”
“Look here now— No more of this talk! It’s just the eve-of-battle jitters, that’s all. Nothing to shame of, you know.”
“For us who go on, time is up, but you will still have time. Lend us a moment of it each day.”
At dawn, the fateful engagement of the Battle of Jerusalem was joined. That day, the speaker was killed, and his friend Wellesley—W. Tudor Pole—found himself critically wounded, abandoned behind enemy lines, where he lay pinned beneath a fellow soldier’s icy corpse. Yet, miraculously, he survived and eventually made it back to the British camp, keenly aware that he had been preserved for some vague Destiny. Something hinted at by those prophetic words uttered in the lean-to. [1]
Following the Great War, Pole immersed himself in the new wave of Eastern mysticism, becoming a key proponent of the emerging Bahá'í religion. But, God has a puzzling way of using even imperfect vessels in the fulfillment of His perfect plans.
You will still have time. Lend us a moment of it each day. Although Pole never forgot his friend’s enigmatic final speech, its meaning remained shrouded—that is, until a second, and much greater, conflict threatened to wipe Britain, as he knew it, off the map.
In April, 1940, Pole launched into action, campaigning for what he billed as “a rallying point in time, for a few moments every twenty-four hours, for thought, prayer, and personal renewal of courage, resolution, and faith.”[2] His personal theses on the spiritual value of this “silent minute” sound a lot like something from Obiwan Kenobi—a nebulous synergy of psychic thrust with the vast, sympathetic legions beyond the grave. God was in the mix somewhere, as a great Force of Light and Good Will.
But, in spite of his colorful theology (which he wisely—and diplomatically—kept on the Q.T.), no man could have campaigned as relentlessly and passionately for this “National Minute of Silence” as did W. Tudor Pole. It seemed a hopeless task at first. Few could see the virtue of a daily “minute of interruption” in the lives of a nation that struggled hour by hour against impending calamity and fear.
Then came the miraculous evacuation of Dunkirk. Hitler’s forces stood virtually immobile, like the prophet Daniel’s lions, for nine full days while hundreds of small, unarmed fishing boats and pleasure craft, manned by their civilian owners and crews, helped evacuate the British and French armed forces to safety. This “miracle of deliverance”, as Prime Minister Churchill labeled it, came in direct response to the May 26th National Day of Prayer declared by his majesty King George VI.
Suddenly, the “old major, lobbying for his ‘minute-a-day’” didn’t seem so foolish after all. Members of Parliament warmed to Pole’s idea, and eventually Churchill, and even King George himself, threw their support behind the plan: a daily minute when all of Britain should put human activity on hold and bend their thoughts to Heaven. The proposed time for this daily tryst would be a natural focal point in their war-torn nation: the BBC’s nine o’clock news broadcast.
So it was that, the night of November 10, 1940, Pole’s dream was realized, as the recorded voice of Big Ben chimed nine commanding peals—a full minute—across the airwaves, preceding the evening news.
BBC announcer Howard Marshall heralded the debut of this nightly “Big Ben Minute” as a time for Britons everywhere to pause and seek unity of purpose as a free people. Pulpits and periodicals across the nation were swift to define the Minute as a call to prayer. As one clergyman put it, “May the precious Minute turn millions of hearts to seek strength in the Almighty God, Who is the Father of Mercies and the God of all consolation.”[3]
But, the Third Reich of evil fell at last, and Big Ben’s nightly broadcast minute became a Sunday-night-only feature in 1947. By the ’60s, it was dropped from programming forever and, eventually, all but forgotten—a nostalgic memory of silver-headed nannies.
A fetching story. But, did this Big Ben Minute indeed have any effect on the outcome of World War II? And even if it did—what relevance could it possibly have for us “twenty-first centurians?”
Walter Lang, in his introduction to W. Tudor Pole’s 1968 book Writing on the Ground, recounts, “According to the BBC, the number of those observing [the Silent Minute] in Britain and Europe from 1942 onwards ran into many millions.”[4]
During his eight bloody empire-building years, Adolph Hitler invaded—depending how you count them—some 20 to 25 sovereign countries. But, in the face of relentless, punishing attacks from the Nazi Luftwaffe, culminating in a shower of over 1400 V-2 rockets (roughly as big around as an SUV, and as long as a school bus), over a 200-day period, which killed and maimed thousands of civilians, Britain not only remained unconquered, but joined the waves of offensive that rolled back the dark blanket of terror from the face of Europe.
How could this be? Lang’s account goes on to say:
Soon after the end of hostilities in Europe in 1945, a British Intelligence officer, interrogating high Nazi officials, asked one of them why he thought Germany had lost the war. This was the reply: “During the war, you had a secret weapon for which we could find no counter-measure, and which we did not understand, but it was very powerful. It was associated with the striking of Big Ben each evening. I believe you called it ‘the Silent Minute.’”[5]
George Santayana, the great philosopher-poet, warned that “those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”[6] True enough. But, as another deep thinker said—carving the same thought with a more inspirational knife—“Wisest of the wise is he who learns by the experience of others.”
For those who have gone before us, time is up indeed. But we who still have time can seize the baton—of precedent and of legacy—proffered by that great cloud of witnesses, to fulfill God’s purpose in our own generation.
Indeed, a grassroots movement is already afoot, in our own United States of America, to establish a daily Silent Minute for reconnecting with the Almighty.[7] And, we have never been in such desperate need of it.
There is no Luftwaffe blackening the skies over our cities, no U-boats closing in on our coasts. But more insidious—because they go unseen—are the very hosts of hell that threaten to destroy us from within: atheistic humanism, pervasive substance abuse, rampant immorality, the holocaust of abortion, the god of entertainment...and the list goes on. Judgment hangs over America like Damocles’ sword—suspended by a single hair of God’s patience.
God is looking for Americans who—as he said to Ezekiel—will “...stand before Me in the gap on behalf of the land, so I [will] not have to destroy it.”[8]
Brother, can you spare a minute?
Our plight seems so hopeless that we assume it would take an army of Elijah clones, all dressed in potato sacks, fasting and praying for forty days, to begin to make a difference. Not so!
Consider that Elijah was made of the same stuff as we are. Consider that, through the cross of Jesus Christ, God has “something better for us”[9]—better, even, than what the prophets of old enjoyed: namely, the right to approach the throne of “Abba, Father” as His beloved children. Consider Jesus’ words: “...if two of you on earth agree about anything you ask for, it will be done for you by my Father in heaven.”[10]
Consider that, just as a minute of united, concurrent prayer disarmed the satanic engine of the Third Reich, such a phenomenon could open the windows of Heaven to slake the moral and spiritual drought of our time.
My wife and I were at a roadside rest area last winter, when we noticed a man acting very strangely. First, he spread a blanket on the tarmac behind his parked car. Standing on the blanket, and shading his eyes with one hand, he turned this way and that, studying the sky like E.T. waiting for the Mother Ship to arrive. Then he knelt, forehead to the ground—facing precisely east.
I have no doubt that we were witnessing a Muslim worshipper facing Mecca to say his prayers at the prescribed daily hour. But to us, this was a foreign scene indeed.
Jesus told the woman at the well, “You Samaritans worship what you do not know; we worship what we do know...”[11] As disciples of the living Christ, we can stand to learn something of the discipline of Islam. If they can synchronize their prayer times in united appeal to one who does not hear, then why can’t we approach our loving, attentive God in unison of time and purpose from coast to coast?
And, what effect might this collective onslaught have on the gates of hell? Don’t think it would be feeble—but, staggering indeed! Such was the deafening, united shout that brought down the walls of Jericho.
Why not join a growing corps of “Minute-men” across our land who, like the Minutemen of the American Revolution, are committed to decisive action: one minute of daily, consistent, concerted prayer to change the course of history in our nation?
In fact, most cell phones and pagers come equipped with an alarm feature. Set it for 9:00 p.m. Eastern Time (8:00 Central; 7:00 Mountain; 6:00 Pacific). Then—facing, not Mecca, but the very throne of God in heaven—join with thousands across America in a one-minute prayer of agreement.
The sword of God’s judgment remains suspended by an unbroken hair, partly because of the righteous few. We still have time. Let us lend a minute of it each day, until the rain of God’s grace saturates our dry, thirsty land once again.
“If My people, who are called by My name, will humble themselves and pray and seek My face and turn from their wicked ways, then will I hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and will heal their land.”
– II Chronicles 7:14 (NIV)


[1] Lang, Walter. Introduction. Writing on the Ground. By Wellesley Tudor Pole. London: Neville Spearman, 1968. 9-18.
[2] Dakers, Andrew. The Big Ben Minute. London: Dakers, Ltd.; Edinburgh: Riverside, [1943?]. 7.
[3] Dakers 14.
[4] Lang 9-18.
[5] Lang 9-18.
[6] Santayana, George. Reason in Common Sense. 1905. New York: Dover, 1980. 269-291; ch. 12.
[7] "One minute of prayer each night-Grass Roots Effort." TruthOrFiction.com 2008. 23 Nov 2008 .
[8] The Holy Bible, New International Version (NIV). 1973. Grand Rapids: Zondervan; Colorado Springs: International Bible Society, 1988. Ezekiel 22.30.
[9] NIV Hebrews 11.40.
[10] NIV Matthew 18.19.
[11] NIV John 4.22.

Copyright © Brad Fenichel 2008 All Rights Reserved