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intro chapter 1 chapter 2 chapter 3 chapter 4 chapter 5 chapter 6 chapter 7 chapter 8 chapter 9 chapter 10 chapter 11
intro chapter 1 chapter 2 chapter 3 chapter 4 chapter 5 chapter 6 chapter 7 chapter 8 chapter 9 chapter 10 chapter 11
introduction[1]
                  As I age, I find many childhood memories exist as somewhat of a blur.  Other  memories have lapsed to consist only as bits and pieces of long-term memory  strings engraved in otherwise near-vacant areas, almost obliterated from  memory.   As I approach the mid-life years of my life, I’m recognizing a desire  to remember my history in writing, recording it for myself to reflect on and  those in my family who are interested, especially my offspring whom I so deeply  adore.  What love and laughter they have brought into our home!
“Impartation” is a word that intrigues me.  As I spend time with  my children I impart a part of me into their lives.  Value systems, beliefs,  thought patterns are all passed on.  A verse from Proverbs says,         “. . .  as iron sharpens iron, so one man sharpens another.”   Perhaps this is why I am  interested in writing my story; since I can pass it on down the line.
I have much hope for my children and their future.  A significant hope  for them is that they discover their “identify” early in their lives,  proceed with that discovery to learn their “life purpose” and grow to  become the building blocks of the Kingdom wherever their world may take them. To  place their faith and trust in Him and become followers of God, whom they  discover first from their parents and family.  My optimism extends to them  becoming leaders in their church, maintaining His high standard and being a bold  influence for others.  This rather than in contrast only being influenced by a  dying, self-seeking and uncaring world around them.  Oh that they can be keenly  aware of the dual message of the Cross, both in it’s vertical (personal) as well  as it’s horizontal (others-centered) dimension.
                 Discovering one’s “identity” apparently,  is a fundamental search  for some people in their early years, sometimes extending past age  thirty.  Sadly perhaps some never do actually find out who it is that they  really are and why we are here.  In the writing of “my story”, not only  am I recollecting bits and pieces of my history, but I am reflecting on my basic  identity.  Not merely remembering who I am in it’s genealogical or  socio-economic context but finding out who I am as a living, thinking,  decision-making person.  
What ideas, people, passions and memories shape my life right now, and  how did those ideas get in my head?  For reference’s sake, what are the memories  that were associated with those years .  Perhaps also, what were the mistakes I  made?  What were “hard-times”, and what purpose can hard-times in one’s  life serve?  What could I have done better?  What aspect of my life could I have  more excellently developed?  
                 Another significant motivator for this study of my identity is my studies on my  family genealogy.  What interest I have in my roots began on my Uncle Enos’  [2] kitchen table twenty five years ago in the mid-1970’s.  As a frequent visitor to  Essex County during the summer months of vacation time, I grew to like my  uncle.  Uncle Enos, like his father, (my grandfather) presented himself as  seemingly simultaneously direct and gruff as well as so very kind to me.  I  appreciated his honest approach, and sought to stay in his good books.  There  was a sort of kinship/friendship relationship that we enjoyed, which no doubt  had begun between my father and him, and continued throughout the years that I  knew him.  
More years passed, and our early friendship continued through elementary  school,  with Uncle Enos now teaching me how to collect stamps.  Many more years  passed, our mutual interests again connecting with my interest in his study of  family genealogy.  He trusted me enough to let me take his prized material away  for photocopying, however I remember that it did take some convincing.  Conscientiously I placed the originals on the photocopier taking care not to  dog-ear the edges.  I all too well understood that the material represented  countless hours of accurate research and charting. The information in the family  charts he’d created later led Andrea, my parent’s and I on an fascinating and  fruitful search for family roots, in the southwest of England after my parent’s  met us in Europe on our return from living in Sudan.  From the information Uncle  Enos researched, we were able to find the resting place of Phil Hart, my great,  great grandfather’s tombstone in a church courtyard in Dittisham, in Southwest  England near the river Dart.
For more than another decade, the photocopies lay dormant in a chest in  my garage well after my uncle’s death, having only been occasionally referenced,  when my career beckoned another move and I had to once again pack things up.   However, they were never forgotten, but there seemed never enough time to pursue  them. 
My interest in my roots again piqued when I discovered an inexpensive  computer program that promised to be the tool to preserve what exploration had  been done by my uncle, and allow me to perhaps put a finishing (or should I say  continuing) touch on his study.  The computer allows me to expand my study to  include the Dohms side of the family.
How refreshing it was to find Art and Herb Domes’ quite-exhaustive book  documenting the origins of my mother’s side of the family.  Imagining what life  was like in 19th century days gone by was easy as I read through  their research into my Dohms’ origins.
Clearly my family history has shown very humble beginnings. Not that I  had been expecting to discover any link to aristocracy.  Yet, I was not  disappointed to learn my ancestors were farmers and blacksmiths and the like;   hard working immigrants who knew happiness, good times, change, struggle,  rejection, heartbreak, and evidently often early death. Knowledge of this allows  me to feel a sense of appreciation for generations gone by.  Descending down the  ancestral tree behind them, I enjoy a sense of continuity in knowledge of my  origins. There is personal accountability and responsibility in being the next  link in the long chain.  As well there is a certain measure of satisfaction as  pieces of the puzzle come together and the ancestral identity picture begins to  appear.  
Understanding family history is important to me.  However, how much more  important it is to understand who it is that I am becoming!  God is most  probably more interested in what I am becoming than knowing the  previous victories or failures in my life, or where exactly it was that I came  from geneologically.  Yesterday is history, tomorrow is mystery.  Curiosity and  challenge grant desire to investigate this big wide world in which I live.  So  many avenues beckon for my time and allegiance.  The avenue that I choose in  each situation will thus narrow my choice for the next road on the pilgrim  journey to who I am becoming while travelling on this earth.  As well, I have  come to realize the troubles and trials that come my way on this journey are  really just opportunities to see Creator God still at work!
Since choosing to become a christian as a child of nine, I think of  God’s promise in His Word to me, “. . . He who began a good work in you, will  be faithful to complete it!”    I could not bear to hear the words of the  apostle applied to my failure to follow Christ, “. . . You were running a  good race - Who cut in on you?”.  Rather I would hear, “. . . forgetting  what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to  win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.”
How important it is to remain true to one’s identity. When presented  with new people and situations, I can’t forget who I really am, where I came  from and what it is that motivates, inspires and dare I say “drives”me to  what I am becoming!
Many of my memories were put into my laptop during the countless  overnights I've spent in hotels while working for the airlines.  This  narrative is at times an accounting process requiring simple recollection of  straight facts.  Other times introspection is  necessary to convey thought and decision patterns.  To add variety I’ve at times  written in both first and third person.  Finally, I will share with you in Whom  I’ve found my true identity. 
Mark
Go To:  My Story - Chapter 1
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         [1]      Note:   This narrative account     first started in the summer of 1998 (with parts derived from various     personal files created in 1996)
         [2]     Enos Howson - Lived on Malden Road, Windsor, Ontario until his homecoming on     December 18,1986.
chapter one: early years / early memories
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Manitoba 
      I, Mark James Howson was     born on August 11, 1957 in Beausejour, Manitoba to parents who held a     pastorate nearby in Lac Du Bonnet with the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada     (PAOC). | /Documents/Mark's%20Docs/MyStory/My%20Webs(doubleclick%20an%20html%20doc%20inside%20these%20docs%20for%20MyStory)/myweb11/new_page_1_files/image002.jpg) | ||
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One of my earliest memories is     of the house we lived in at Altamont, Manitoba, near Lac Du Bonnet until     about 1959 or 1960 when I was about 4 years old, was a snow tunnel/cave that     my Dad made from the snow in our front yard.  
I also remember a tire swing     that Dad had made in the back yard at our house in Altamont.  These memories     are refreshed and come to life when viewing old photos of our life there.       | /Documents/Mark's%20Docs/MyStory/My%20Webs(doubleclick%20an%20html%20doc%20inside%20these%20docs%20for%20MyStory)/myweb11/new_page_1_files/image010.jpg) | |
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The Red Lake Area
Red Lake
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           From Lac Du Bonnet, our     family moved to another pastorate in Rossburn, Manitoba, and then moved     again to the Red Lake, Ontario area in approximately 1960, where my Dad     worked for a number of years in the Madsen Gold mine, after deciding to     temporarily leave the ministry.  I remember going to meet Dad at the bus     stop, near our rented house.  There the bus would drop off the miners who     commuted to their job in Madsen, from their home in Red Lake.  It was so     exciting to walk down to meet Dad, hold his big hand and carry his lunchbox     as we walked home! | /Documents/Mark's%20Docs/MyStory/My%20Webs(doubleclick%20an%20html%20doc%20inside%20these%20docs%20for%20MyStory)/myweb11/new_page_1_files/image016.jpg) | 
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          In     1961, I remember the trauma of my first day at Kindergarten.  It was so hard     to say goodby to Mom!  Staying in the class while she went home, was a     milestone as gradually I was released out of the home into school life.  In     my mind’s eye, I think I can almost feel the butterflies-in-your-stomach     feeling I had when I revisit this long ago scene.  Also very vivid is a     winter day during Grade one, when I froze my tongue to the metal rail after     licking it!  Ouch! | 
 Another early memory that year was walking down to the local barbershop  across the street from my school, and getting a real barber to cut my hair when  my regular barber, (Dad) didn’t have the time.  Time sure went quicker than when  Dad cut it!  
Another remembrance during this year was falling out of the family’s  Volkswagen Bug.  Times then were many years prior to seatbelts being the norm,  and folks never gave traveling without a seatbelt a second thought.  With Dad at  the wheel, the family car was only a few yards from the house, when the  passenger door opened as it went around the corner at low speed, spilling young  Markus onto the snowy street.  He jumped up unhurt and ran to catch up with the  car, and got reseated back in the passenger seat beside a surprised Dad!
Madsen
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          In 1963, the Howson     family moved the eighteen miles from Red Lake to Madsen, Ontario where     Mark’s parent’s pioneered a church in Madsen after seeing so many unchurched     children resident there.  Month after month prior to each service, Dad would     drive around the little town (population of probably 800) in his car,     picking up the children from the local native and white population, and     after the service would again drive the route dropping them off back at     home.  There was no salary or other form of remuneration, but rather the     payoff was that of seeing kids accepting Christ as Savior and the payoff     that comes with knowing a mission and passion fulfilled! | /Documents/Mark's%20Docs/MyStory/My%20Webs(doubleclick%20an%20html%20doc%20inside%20these%20docs%20for%20MyStory)/myweb11/new_page_1_files/image020.jpg) | 
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Being so young then (7 years     old),  I know little of my parent’s life previous to the Red Lake area, but     so well I am aware that Mom and Dad have always had a passion to see     precious children taught the Word of God, and it was clear to them that no     one else was presenting the gospel in Madsen.  I use the word “passion”     here in the context of their longing, desire, fondness, and love for those     priceless children who needed to hear the story of Jesus.   | 
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My Dad was 40 years old in those     days, and yet as I watch him grow old, (now at over 75 years old) his     “passion” for the “lost” remains unchanged.  At 72 years of age, my Mom     and Dad started a “Kids Club” for all the unchurched kids on their street in     Saskatoon!  Being raised in a home by parents with such a passion for souls     left a remarkable impact on another impressionable life: mine.   A wise     observer          [3] once wrote, “True greatness is measured     only in terms of humility and service”.   | 
Perhaps this is one of the reasons I think so highly of my father.  He  continues to demonstrate consistent humility and untiring, unselfish service.   This humble reality is how he has lived a life of service in obedience to the  Master’s Great Commission  [4]:  “Go . . .  and make disciples of all nations . . .”
Our family continued to attend the Red Lake Assembly, and so scheduled  church services in Madsen around the church schedule in Red Lake.  Between the  two assemblies, the two Howson children attended a lot of church services during  any given week.
One of the earliest entrepreneurial ventures I had was selling Christmas  cards door to door in Madsen.
The Crusader
                 Probably the most prominent memories that come from Red Lake, Ontario, are those  of the very vibrant Red Lake Pentecostal church (a  PAOC affiliate) we attended while living in that area.  Witnessing the genuine  worship of this charismatic assembly definitely left an impression on young  Mark.  It was during this time that Mark around 1964 at age 7 he joined the  Pentecostal Crusader program at the Red Lake church.  
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    Aspects     of Crusaders could be compared in parallel with the secular Boy Scout     program. They had a special and distinct uniform to wear, badges to earn,     salutes, codes to live by, and a special handshake (while saying “Aleph,     -May the Lord watch between you and me, while we are absent one from the     other”), honor codes, mottoes (“Always on Guard”), and had many     other facets which were referenced to Ephesians 6:  “Wherefore take unto you     the whole armor of God”.   The obvious difference in Crusaders, was that the     emphasis was on spiritual development, in addition to other academic     interests.  Group activities included campouts, wiener roasts, hikes,     purposeful bible stories and crafts (example: building birdhouses, etc.).      All in all it was excellent exposure toward a disciplined, Christian life. | 
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One of the Madsen memories was     building treehouses (called “treeforts”), especially the one just behind the     house.  The idea was to have fun in them with your friends, but it seemed     that your “friends” would often destroy them when you weren’t there.      Another memory was cutting down trees in the “bush” with Dad to stockpile     for use in the home’s woodburning stove during the bitter cold northern     winter.  On our return, Mom would tell us to have a bath because we “smelled     like the bush” after handling the pine and birch logs. | /Documents/Mark's%20Docs/MyStory/My%20Webs(doubleclick%20an%20html%20doc%20inside%20these%20docs%20for%20MyStory)/myweb11/new_page_1_files/image028.jpg) | 
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         [1] Started Narrative     in 1998
         [3] Janet Erskine     Stewart
         [4] Matthew 28
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Go to: My Story - Chapter 2
intro chapter 1 chapter 2 chapter 3 chapter 4 chapter 5 chapter 6 chapter 7 chapter 8 chapter 9 chapter 10 chapter 11
chapter two: northern ontario
Manitouwadge
             After sensing God’s leading in their  ministry, Mom and Dad packed up our family and moved across Northern Ontario to  the mining community of Manitouwadge, where my father secured full-time work in  the machine shop at “Geco”, one of the local copper mines owned by Inco.  The  real reason my father moved there was to shepherd the local PAOC assembly as  Pastor, after the previous pastor had up and left, leaving the assembly in  tatters.
There are certain characteristics that appear particular to  “northerners”.  I suppose it takes a certain type of individual to exist in a  harsh, isolated environment. By way of observation, northerners seem to love the  outdoors, they’re tough, set in their ways, opinionated, resilient and to be  sure possessing of lots of spirit!   Here is a brief history of the area I found  in the newspaper.
"Frontier Is   Pushed Back At Manitouwadge"   "Whole New Mining Area May Be Added to North".
  Such headlines in 1955 proclaimed the birth of what was then touted to be the   beginning of a "bustling new backwoods metropolis with every 20th century   comfort and convenience".
Newspapers across Canada carried various stories about Manitouwadge, a rich new mining area, as Willroy and Geco Mines began a copper development that was to last more than four decades.
"Manitouwadj," an Ojibway word meaning "Cave of the Great Spirit", Gives one the key to early inhabitants of the area. The nomadic Ojibway Indians left a distinct impression on the culture of Manitouwadge as well as two legends as to how the town came to be known as such. According to the first, The Great Spirit Manitou was sailing down a stream in a canoe that had a rudder attached. He noticed a huge Canada goose flying overhead and being hungry, quickly drew an arrow from his quiver, put it in his bow and shot the bird.
The giant bird fell, tearing the rudder from the canoe. When the waters settled, the giant bird, a large fish and the rudder of the canoe were lying on the land. Manitou feasted that night and in the morning, was so filled with a sense of well-being he at once set about creating the area of Manitouwadj. Into the depressions formed in the ground by the huge Canada goose, the large fish, the rudder from his canoe and his moccasined feet, he poured water to make lakes. Hills were formed from the ground pushed up in the commotion. Copper rings around the arrow shaft were used to form ore bodies. The wood shaft of the arrow was made into deciduous trees, while the rudder wood formed the coniferous trees. To commemorate his stay, the mighty Manitou named the place Manitouwadge, meaning "Lodge of the Great Spirit". Another legend, dating back to the 1800s, suggests copper ore was first found at the end of the last lake in the chain. Copper was extracted albeit in crude fashion by settlements of Ojibway Indians, camped along the North Shore of Lake Superior.
A young Indian brave ventured into a previously undiscovered opening in the hillside, while portaging the area. Intrigued, he shouted and was frightened to hear his voice echo back to him. He hastily returned to his companions to tell of his discovery of the "Wadge" (cave) of the Great Spirit, Manitou. Thus the lake became known to the Indians as Manitouwadge, Cave of the Great Spirit.
Three prospectors Roy Barker, Bill Dawd, and Jack Forster were instrumental in the development of Manitouwadge as a mining community. Following establishment of the Noranda (Geco Division) and Wilroy Mines in the early 1950s, Manitouwadge was organized as an Improvement District in late 1954. Steady growth followed and on Jan. 1, 1975, the Improvement District was raised to township status.
In 1968, the Ontario Paper Company moved its centre of area operations from Heron Bay South to Manitouwadge. During 1975 to 1976 the Woodlands Division of the American Can Corporation began closing its bush campsites. The result was a slow growth in population until 1978 (as workers relocated to town), when the Willroy mine closed and the population decreased. With the closure of Geco Mine in 1996, forestry became the primary industry in the immediate area, but the base of the economy and growth in Manitouwadge had by the time of Geco's closure, been given new life, with the discovery of gold in the Hemlo area. Many miners from the Hemlo operations made the town their home. With the discovery, Manitouwadge once again experienced steady growth, and today continues to be a friendly community where dedicated individuals carry on the efforts of the early pioneers and where a handshake seals friendships. Just as it did for three prospectors by a remote lake in Northern, Ontario nearly 50 years ago.
Newspapers across Canada carried various stories about Manitouwadge, a rich new mining area, as Willroy and Geco Mines began a copper development that was to last more than four decades.
"Manitouwadj," an Ojibway word meaning "Cave of the Great Spirit", Gives one the key to early inhabitants of the area. The nomadic Ojibway Indians left a distinct impression on the culture of Manitouwadge as well as two legends as to how the town came to be known as such. According to the first, The Great Spirit Manitou was sailing down a stream in a canoe that had a rudder attached. He noticed a huge Canada goose flying overhead and being hungry, quickly drew an arrow from his quiver, put it in his bow and shot the bird.
The giant bird fell, tearing the rudder from the canoe. When the waters settled, the giant bird, a large fish and the rudder of the canoe were lying on the land. Manitou feasted that night and in the morning, was so filled with a sense of well-being he at once set about creating the area of Manitouwadj. Into the depressions formed in the ground by the huge Canada goose, the large fish, the rudder from his canoe and his moccasined feet, he poured water to make lakes. Hills were formed from the ground pushed up in the commotion. Copper rings around the arrow shaft were used to form ore bodies. The wood shaft of the arrow was made into deciduous trees, while the rudder wood formed the coniferous trees. To commemorate his stay, the mighty Manitou named the place Manitouwadge, meaning "Lodge of the Great Spirit". Another legend, dating back to the 1800s, suggests copper ore was first found at the end of the last lake in the chain. Copper was extracted albeit in crude fashion by settlements of Ojibway Indians, camped along the North Shore of Lake Superior.
A young Indian brave ventured into a previously undiscovered opening in the hillside, while portaging the area. Intrigued, he shouted and was frightened to hear his voice echo back to him. He hastily returned to his companions to tell of his discovery of the "Wadge" (cave) of the Great Spirit, Manitou. Thus the lake became known to the Indians as Manitouwadge, Cave of the Great Spirit.
Three prospectors Roy Barker, Bill Dawd, and Jack Forster were instrumental in the development of Manitouwadge as a mining community. Following establishment of the Noranda (Geco Division) and Wilroy Mines in the early 1950s, Manitouwadge was organized as an Improvement District in late 1954. Steady growth followed and on Jan. 1, 1975, the Improvement District was raised to township status.
In 1968, the Ontario Paper Company moved its centre of area operations from Heron Bay South to Manitouwadge. During 1975 to 1976 the Woodlands Division of the American Can Corporation began closing its bush campsites. The result was a slow growth in population until 1978 (as workers relocated to town), when the Willroy mine closed and the population decreased. With the closure of Geco Mine in 1996, forestry became the primary industry in the immediate area, but the base of the economy and growth in Manitouwadge had by the time of Geco's closure, been given new life, with the discovery of gold in the Hemlo area. Many miners from the Hemlo operations made the town their home. With the discovery, Manitouwadge once again experienced steady growth, and today continues to be a friendly community where dedicated individuals carry on the efforts of the early pioneers and where a handshake seals friendships. Just as it did for three prospectors by a remote lake in Northern, Ontario nearly 50 years ago.
The church in Manitouwadge was located in the basement of the large  parsonage there, and had been kept going for a few years by a somewhat  “set-in-their-ways” albeit faithful core group of churchgoers.  My parent’s once  again concentrated their efforts in their area of specialty - the Sunday School,  where they found a ready group of followers, many of whom were ripe for God’s  work in their lives.  Some of the more unpleasant duties there included removing  some Sunday School teachers from teaching positions, who shouldn’t have been in  leadership, yet in such a way as to not drive them away from the church.
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section added in 2017:
I'm a paoc preacher's kid raised to be very separate from the world. I'm 60 years old now and I think my mom and dad were the best things ever! I experienced the 'us/them' too, & stayed home alone many times while my friends partied. Yet today feel way more 'connected' for this growing up experience. Went to 'Crusaders' on Wed, prayer meeting on Thursday, youth-group on Friday, got my suit, shirt and shoes ready on Sat., Had the first Sunday church (Sunday-school)at 9:30am, then the 11am worship service, then went with dad to the paper/logging camps (I was the music guy with the accordian) for a 2 pm and later a 3:30pm Sunday afternoon service, then rush home to be in time for the 7pm evangelistic service. ...the next day (Monday) dad would go back to his 'real' job working at the mine, and the church-week for him would start later that night with kid's club!!! Honesty, it rarely occurred to me that this wasn't normal. Dad just loved ministry and serving people. Everybody loved him He was an awesome dad and was busy working for the Lord until the day he died at almost 90.
end of 2017add
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section added in 2017:
I'm a paoc preacher's kid raised to be very separate from the world. I'm 60 years old now and I think my mom and dad were the best things ever! I experienced the 'us/them' too, & stayed home alone many times while my friends partied. Yet today feel way more 'connected' for this growing up experience. Went to 'Crusaders' on Wed, prayer meeting on Thursday, youth-group on Friday, got my suit, shirt and shoes ready on Sat., Had the first Sunday church (Sunday-school)at 9:30am, then the 11am worship service, then went with dad to the paper/logging camps (I was the music guy with the accordian) for a 2 pm and later a 3:30pm Sunday afternoon service, then rush home to be in time for the 7pm evangelistic service. ...the next day (Monday) dad would go back to his 'real' job working at the mine, and the church-week for him would start later that night with kid's club!!! Honesty, it rarely occurred to me that this wasn't normal. Dad just loved ministry and serving people. Everybody loved him He was an awesome dad and was busy working for the Lord until the day he died at almost 90.
end of 2017add
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                 One of my favourite memories from Manitouwadge was rebuilding the engine in the  family car.  Dad had bought a 1963 Plymouth Belvedere when we lived in Madsen.   After years of service, Dad is rebuilding the “Big Six” engine as he  calls it.  I watch every move with curious interest, realizing Dad is not a  mechanic, yet having enough faith in his expressed intentions at attempting a  rebuild.  I’m holding wrenches, running for the next tool, conveying messages to  Mom in the process and generally learning, assisting where I can.  I otherwise  have no idea of how an engine works. Yet suddenly I become aware of  another  world out there.  One of big-end bearings, piston rings, ring compressors,  cylinder honing, valve reseating and the like. 
Bundled in old parkas, we are laying on our backs, wedged between the  metal of the car’s bottom and the concrete of the floor in that cold garage.  My  dog “Baron”,  a Shepherd/Labrador cross lays there as well looking somewhat  bored, complaining from time to time at the temperature.  Systematically, Dad  explains how each system and sub-system works in unison to produce the power we  took for granted at the steering wheel.  I am fascinated as the how and the why  is finally unveiled to me!  More fascinating is the grand excitement when after  rolling the car out of the garage, the engine roars to life a few weeks later.   With a boyish grin from ear to ear, Dad steps back if only momentarily to admire  his mechanical aptitude, while Mom cheers from the house window.  With  enthusiasm I sense his excitement.   “But wait” he says, “we have to adjust the  tappets and the ignition timing before we go for a spin!”  My Dad can do  anything!
                 I guess part of the indelibleness of the story, is that this car was the first  “big” car we owned as a family.  While my Dad fondly recalled his series of   Studebakers, I could not, because all I knew of were a series of little  Volkswagens!  I remember driving this beautiful just-purchased Plymouth out of  Russell Motors’ garage down in the big city of Winnipeg.  Although purchased  second-hand, it was a memorable occasion to drive way down to Winnipeg in our  little red Volkswagen bug, and come back to northern Ontario driving the “big”  white Plymouth, which in later years was painted burgundy at the Mennonite  garage back in Red Lake.
                 When our family moved to Manitouwadge, I entered Grade Six where it was  compulsory to take French.  As this was my first exposure to French, I had an  especially difficult time trying to play catch-up with the rest of the class who  had been studying it for quite a few years.  I soon developed an apathetic  attitude to Miss Benoit, who had very little patience for my lack of  enthusiasm.  The fact that my friend Ron Firth felt the same way about her,  strengthened my resolve to have little interest in French class, and that  probably was why I spent a lot of time out in the hall.  I remember French class  as the class that I went to to read my Hardy Boy Mystery Series!  I would have  to say that Miss Benoit and I blocked each other’s goals - so to speak, - in the  ensuing clash!
                 Ryan, my son loves to hear me tell the story of “Baron”.  Baron came into our  lives when our neighbors, the Zotters, were looking to find homes for their  dog’s new litter of puppies.  I remember it took some convincing before Mom and  Dad agreed to us having our own dog.  He was actually not our first dog though,  as my brother Charles had owned a dog who soon after coming to live with us was  hit by a car.  Baron was named after a photographer’s German Shepherd who along  with his master, a Mr. Boose, a friend of Uncle Enos’s from Windsor,  came to  stay with us for a few weeks while photographing the area.  I got quite attached  to that Shepherd and so much wanted to have a dog all my own.  Besides, with the  $8.00 per week in cold, hard cash I brought in after school delivering the  Fort William Times Chronicle newspaper, I now had the means to pay for his  keep.  
                 So with that desire and the means to accomplish it, the stage was set.  Much  discussion ended in me swearing I’d take good care of him, and clean up all the  messes.  From time to time I regretted that promise, but I regardless,  faithfully did my cleanup duty.  
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I well remember the snowy day     when Charles and I went over to the Zotter’s to choose from the litter.  The     puppies were a German Shepherd/black Labrador cross, and I picked Baron for     both his chest markings and his seemingly subdued personality.  Although he     fit into the palm of my hand, I nonetheless decided to try him out on the     leash for the short walk home.  Evidently, it was the first time he had seen     snow, and he only wanted to stop and lick it, and so put his feet straight     out refusing to walk.  I remember him basically “skiing” for the most of the     way home, as I tugged on the leash urging him to walk!  That was the first     of many memories between the dog and us as we grew to love this little guy     dearly. 
           Boys and dogs are perhaps     destined to enjoy each other’s company!  Baron loved to be wherever we were,     and since I was charged with mess cleanup he became mine, and we enjoyed a     deep friendship. Well at least as deep a friendship that a boy can have with     a dog.  After school he was usually with me, and I taught him to do tricks     that some other dogs couldn’t.  One of his favourite was to learn how to     climb up the ladder on the big slide at the Lion’s beach on Manitouwadge     Lake and slide down again and again.  Once he got the hang of it he would do     that over and over on his own without prompting. |  | 
I was at least a bit enterprising as a young teenager. One of my first  enterprises (not including the lemonade and hot dog stands) was cutting  neighborhood lawns in the summer and shoveling their driveways in the winter.   Both required some initiative in a door-to-door marketing effort.  I would  borrow Dad’s lawnmower and push it around town looking for summer employment.   After a winter snowfall, I would borrow Dad’s shovel, again going door to door,  politely asking if folks wanted their driveway shoveled.  Armed with nothing  more than a snow-scoop, for anywhere between $2 - $5.00 a customer,  I would  find someone to hire me to do their work.  Baron would usually not be far away,  investigating the surroundings.  
When business seemed to get a bit slow, Baron and I would give chase  over the hard snowdrifts to any one of the numerous cats we encountered during  our door-to-door marketing effort, (more often at the homes who stated they did  not require their driveway shoveled).  Somewhere in our rounds, Baron and I made  good friends with Toby, a large, friendly Husky, who so very well knew the full  meaning of  “Sic-em”.  He was usually not tied up, and the three of us would  have the greatest excitement night after night terrorizing the local feline  population, giving full chase at my command of “Sic-em”  [1].    Baron thus soon learned the command from the Husky’s example, and was all too  eager in compliance.  Just say the word, Mark - you’re wish is my command!
                 One of the things I did with my friends during these years was to build  soapboxes, or go-carts.  Basically, our definition of a go-cart was a set of  baby carriage wheels which we nailed to a homemade steerable wooden frame. We  would get the wheels from the last trip we made to the local town dump! It was a  rudimentary and fairly spartan creation which we would pull to the top of the  nearest big hill and race down with.  Many a summer day was spent working on our  carts.   
Somewhere in my introduction to wheels, my Dad began to teach us how to  steer the family car.  I learned to steer the Belvedere and later the Polara  over the bush roads around Manitouwadge firstly by sitting on his lap, then when  I could see over the dash, Dad sat beside me.  That was cool - and I felt  proud!!
                 Manitouwadge was where I met my first girlfriend, Linda Schwarzhoff.  I think  our dates consisted mostly of sitting beside each other in church and then in  the car when Dad drove her home!  Mom used to remind us . . .. . . “boys be  faithful to God and to your church”.
Another friend I remember was Ronnie Firth.  He was the son of an  electrician, and so he knew all about things electrical.  His Dad built him a  scale model train set that covered their basement and I loved to run it with  him.
Another Manitouwadge memory is taking swimming lessons at the Lions Club  Beach.  I remember being an awkward swimming student, scared to put my head  under water.  It took many years before I was comfortable around water.
I started high school while in Manitouwadge.  One of the memories during  that time was the 1972 Russia-Canada hockey series, when they allowed the whole  school to assemble in the gym to watch Canada win the last game.  Paul  Henderson, who I later met at my church in Brampton, was the hero, having scored  the final two goals late in the game to win the series which had been tied.  
I also remember doing very well in my typing class.  In fact of all the  courses I took during my school years, I feel it was my typing course that was  the most useful and practical to my life.  I was actually very good at typing  and I think I was the second fastest in the class!
When I was about thirteen years old, I got an after paper route and  delivered newspapers for the Fort William (prior to being called “Thunder Bay”)  newspaper, I believe it was called the Times Chronicle.  After school and  Saturdays, I walked all over Manitouwadge with the heavy newspapers and got a  sore shoulder from the weight.
A few days before I was to start a new summer job at the grocery section  of “The Hudson’s Bay Company”,  my parents informed us we were moving to  Amherstburg, Ontario, not far from where my dad’s family home was.
Amherstburg
                 The first evening after moving to Amherstburg, we lost Baron.  We’d gotten in  late from the long drive from up north, and I wanted to tie him up, but not  having a rope, Dad didn’t think we had better keep him in the parsonage for the  night.  We were grief-stricken when Baron was nowhere in sight by the morning.   Not being able to find him despite a lengthy search, we think he went exploring  and lost his way home.  A few years later however, we spotted him near the  outskirts of town, now belonging to someone else, and not recognizing me at  all.  By then we’d gotten over the loss, so it was somewhat bittersweet to see  him again, and there was one less mystery.
                 Southern Ontario was quite a bit different from my life to date, which had been  spent up in northern Ontario.  There were big cities to replace the small towns  I’d grown accustomed to, and fields of vegetables instead of “bush”.  I had had  some exposure to southern Ontario as I would spend most summers visiting my  grandparents and aunts, uncles and cousins who lived there.  I also remember at  least two summers working for Funk’s Seed Corn, in Cottam, Ontario, detasseling  corn plants.
                 I had to transition to a new high school and find a new set of friends, and as I  was sixteen by now, I needed to find a job.  Some of the jobs I had were working  for Weismer’s Auction Barn for a few weeks, near Amherstburg.  When Mr. Weismer,  the auctioneer would phone me to help him, I would go with him in his truck  throughout Essex County, gathering up articles from people who were  participating in the auction, and then later in the evening hold them up for the  auctioneer to auction off.  I remember working hard at one house loading up our  truck with used goods for the auction, when I dropped a huge glass ashtray I was  carrying because my hands were already too full.  I think I upset the auctioneer  with that little accident, because I don’t think he ever phoned me to work with  him again. 
                 However, I don’t remember worrying about it too much because I soon found my  first “real” bigtime job, working for Dominion Food Stores, where I worked for  almost three years.  My job at first was an after-school job packing groceries,  and carrying them out to the customer’s cars.  My most famous carry-out customer  was The Honorable Eugene Whelan, who lived just outside Amherstburg and at the  time was Canada’s Agricultural minister.  Later I was put on full-time at  Dominion and got to stock shelves, a job which I relished compared to packing  grocery bags at the “front-end”.  
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   No doubt     the biggest purchase to that date I had made with my own dollars was the     1972 Honda CB350 motorcycle I bought.  I remember being so very excited when     I brought it home!  I think I paid about $ 800.00 for it. | 
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   I later     brought home the proverbial “basket case”.  I remember literally carrying in     my new (well, new to me) 1967 650 Triumph Bonneville in boxes and boxes of     miscellaneous parts.  I had purchased all the pieces from Power Cycle in     Windsor.  Apparently, someone wanted to rebuild the bike but didn’t finish.      I took the engine all apart and rebuilt it.  I got British Motorcycles in     Windsor to help with various aspects of the project.  I remember it featured      .040” overbore cylinders, a TR6 single carb head and long front forks.  It     was the last year of the 4-speed transmission series.  Although when I first     purchased it in parts, I had plans to “chop” it into a real custom machine.      However, reality set in once I started into the project, and I realized I     was in well over my head, and didn’t have the experience or money to     complete the project. |  | 
However, before I could sell the custom frame I had bought with the  package, the Windsor police detectives came to our house and knocked on our  door.  The police informed me that I had allegedly purchased a stolen motorcycle  frame with altered serial numbers.  The officers took my bike out of our house  before my very eyes, put it in the trunk of their cruiser, and took it to  Windsor to be held as evidence in a case against the owner of the bike shop.  I  was somewhat surprised and depressed.  I had to testify in the court case that I  had purchased the motorcycle from him.  I remember swearing my oath to tell the  truth on a black bible.  I was a bit scarred!
However, sometime later the frame was released back to me.  Apparently,  the police weren’t able to secure a successful prosecution against him.  I sold  the custom frame back to Power Cycle and I bought a “stock” frame.  With  all these parts, I finally mounted the engine and parts in the frame and took  the whole bike to British Motorcycles and they rewired it and got it up  and running for me.  
I worked at Dominion until my cousin Graham Hauser helped get me  a much better paying job where he worked, driving a catering truck from site to  site in Windsor, at a company called Metro Catering.  The company slogan  was “Metro Catering - Where coffee is King!”   I will agree that they had  about the best tasting coffee I’d ever tasted, and I have been a connoisseur of  good coffee ever since!  I remember making $19,000.00 per year, not bad then for  an eighteen year old!  I sold coffee, sodas, donuts and sandwiches, not to  mention several dozen other things that the trucks sold.  I had a regular route  that I went on from day to day, and sometimes on Saturdays.  As Windsor was  primarily an automobile manufacturing city, many of the sites the catering truck  went to were involved in car and car-parts production, as well as construction  sites.  I saw alot of different types of people in a day and for the most part I  would say that I associated with a cross-section of rough and tough blue collar  workers.  I would get up every workday at 3:30 am to shower, eat breakfast and  drive the twenty miles from Amherstburg to pick up the truck in Windsor. There I  would load it with fresh supplies, and then drive to my first call of the day.   By the time I got back home to Amherstburg, it was around 5:00 or 6 pm.  
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I stayed on at Metro for     almost three years.  While it was profitable, after the second year I no     longer felt challenged by the job.  What Metro Catering enabled me to do was     to afford my first car a 1972 Oldsmobile Cutlass and flying lessons!  Soon     after starting with Metro Catering, I began to look a bit farther     down the road and realizing I didn’t want to be a caterer all my life, I     decided to look into getting on to something more challenging. After a while     I finally moved to Windsor, away from my parents “nest” and into my first     apartment and on my own for the first time! |  | 
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         [1] “Sic-Em”: best     pronounced with a double emphasis placed on the “s”.
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 Next: My Story - Chapter 3
chapter 2    chapter 3    chapter 4    chapter 5    chapter 6    chapter 7    chapter 8    chapter 9  chapter   10  chapter 11
chapter three: starting a career
Windsor
                 In 1972 when I was age 16, Rev. Peter Lukannen (a PAOC pastor from Longlac Manitoba) came to  Manitouwadge one winter.  He gave both my dad and I, 15-minute rides in his  one-passenger Piper Cub on skis around the local lake.  That ride planted the  desire for me to want to someday get my pilot’s license.  I was sold!
                 In the fall of 1975, several years later, I remember watching a  small airplane cruise overhead while driving down Highway 401 in the family car  to a family gathering in Watford, Ontario.  That little airplane got me dreaming  again of my desire to learn how to fly, and on returning from that family  outing, began making inquiries about flight training.  A few weeks later I enrolled in  flying lessons at the Windsor Flying  Club.
                 With meeting my first instructor, I started a friendship that has continued  through the years. Len Houser, who later was hired on at Air Canada,  was the  first to introduce me to flying lessons.  I enjoyed the thrills and sensations  of flying immensely.  After my first solo flight, I felt as if I was walking on  air for several days at a time.  
Leaving Home and  Spreading My Wings
                It took many years and lots of effort to shape my flying lessons into a career.   It also took me to many new destinations, and new situations.  Along the way, I have stayed  true to the values and faith in God that was taught by my parents, making a  conscientious effort to not being wrongly influenced by those around me.   However, this has not been very easy or popular, especially when I was younger.   The world's influence is staggering; - little wonder then that the apostle  urges us in Romans 12, ". . . don't let the world squeeze you into it's mold!".
               However, along the way there have been numerous christian influences apart from  my parents that have stood out more than others.   To these men I remain so  very  grateful.  Their influence on my life has been worthy of much more than  this passing mention. Notably,  radio pastor Chuck Swindoll and his   Insight For Living Radio Broadcast.  I have been listening to him since  1985, and have always been immensely inspired and greatly encouraged during some  of the times in my life when my feelings seemingly were at their lowest.  Also,  Bill Gothard   and his Institute of Basic Life Principles,  helped create a greater love for God’s word, and an understanding of basic life  issues better.  James Dobson, from Focus on the Family has been an excellent  sounding board for many issues as I faithfully have listened to his wise counsel  through the years.
              I left Windsor in 1979 to take a helicopter course at Ranger Lake Helicopters in  Sault St. Marie.  While I elected not to pursue helicopters full time, I  very much enjoyed the flying the Bell 47-G2.  It was the same type of  helicopter that appeared in the M.A.S.H. television series openings.
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Next: My Story - Chapter 4
chapter 3 chapter 4 chapter 5 chapter 6 chapter 7 chapter 8 chapter 9 chapter 10 chapter 11
chapter four: now i’m flying!
First Solo
             I'd enrolled in flight training for my Private Pilot’s license at  the Windsor Flying Club in the Spring of 1976, and by 1977 I’d earned it.  Next  on the list was a night rating, followed by a commercial pilot’s license.  In  1979, jobs in aviation were not plentiful, so I enrolled with Ranger Lake  Helicopters in Sault St. Marie, Ontario to try my hand at chopper flying.
Copter’s
             While enjoying helicopters, it just didn’t have the same appeal  compared to that of flying airplanes had, to say nothing of finding that the  apparent few isolated job prospects were found only in remote northern areas,  which was just not my forte.  Shortly before the final checkride was to have  happened following 55 hours training on the Bell 47-G4   [1], a fellow student damaged the tail harp  on the machine while wheeling it out the hangar door.  There was only one  training aircraft, so with finances dwindling and repairs to the damaged  helicopter weeks away, I got into my ’72 orange Olds and combed all the northern  commercial operators of light airplanes within driving distance, to find  employment as a pilot on floatplanes.                
First Flying Job - Derry Air
                 While speaking to one operator after another, there appeared to  be no jobs available.  Finally, in a small, isolated Ontario town called Gogama[2],  I found a tourist outfitter/operator looking for someone to do brush clearing,  dock building, loading and unloading, general maintenance work and yes! . . .  even a bit of flying.  So I hired on at $400. Per month, including room and  board.  
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            The boss and the chief pilot, gave me a checkout on the somewhat     underpowered 138 HP, pontoon equipped Piper Cub (PA12) and a float     rating.  This was the first in a series of flying jobs in a career that has     spanned a few decades and thousands of hours spent in many an airplane     cockpit! |  | 
Next, Multi’s, Instruments, & Floats, Ski’s in the Bush !
I earned my multi-engine rating on Beechcraft Travelair aircraft at the  Winnipeg Flying Club at St. Andrews, Manitoba in 1979.
             Later in 1979, my off-airport experience continued with another  tourist lodge operator, Huron Air, flying tourists and local Indians up to  isolated northern lakes from a base in Armstrong   [3], Ontario flying Cessna 185 float  aircraft. After that season on floats, I went back to the Winnipeg Flying Club  and got the all important instrument flight rating during the late fall / early  winter months of 1979/80.  The IFR rating was the start of a whole new world of  flying.  
Parson’s Airways Northern Ltd.
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            Although Howard Friesen the owner invited me back to Armstrong for the     following summer season as his chief pilot, I declined and found employment     up at Flin Flon, Manitoba with Parson’s Airways Northern Ltd. for the     balance of the winter months.  After a few weeks at the main base in Flin     Flon, the boss sent me up to an isolated Indian reservation called         Pukatawagen, located on the Churchill River, in Manitoba. | 
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       Pukatawagan, (population 3,500) proved to be a real cross cultural     learning experience.  At the time, Pukatawagan held the notorious reputation     of having the highest crime rate per capita in all of Western Canada.  The     Parson’s pilot sent up about a year previous to my arrival, had been found     in the remains of the burned out pilot’s residence with a bullet in his     back, apparently a revenge killing for the pilot reportedly taking advantage     of his sister.      
            However, despite that and fending off drunks who wanted to charter the     Cessna 185 aircraft on wheelskis in the middle of the night,  many charter     trips were flown off of the hard-packed snow on the river for the duration     of the winter season.  How very sad it was though to witness the ravaging     effects of alcohol among these wonderful, friendly people! |  | 
     Warm memories remain of my northern customers.  Memories of one of the  Indian trappers paying for his charter flight with beaver pelts, which in turn I  cashed in at the local Hudson’s Bay store.  I was reluctent to accept them as  payment, but after taking the skins to the local "Bay" store, the charter was  paid for.   There  were essentially 3 categories for rating their furs; prime, below prime, and  above prime, and the store manager paid accordingly.  I remember a prime beaver  fur netting somewhere around $50.00 at the time.  
      Willy Dumas, a local Pukatawagan Indian would often charter my aircraft down to  Flin Flon, and on the way out of town would ask him to buzz local friends down  below with the airplane.  Sometimes it would take a bit of convincing - usually  a ten dollar bill would do the trick though!  The customers food of choice on  flights out of Flin Flon towards the reserve would be unequivocally Kentucky  Fried Chicken, pop and potato chips.  Tangy smells would quickly fill up the  small 6-seat cabin as soon as the doors were closed.
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         [1] Designed in 1947,     the small helicopter with a top speed of around 60 mph, was a good training     aircraft in it’s day. The TV series “MASH” used pictures of Bell 47     helicopters in their opening theme shots.
         [2] Gogama, Ontario is     situated north of Sudbury, Ontario
         [3] Armstrong, Ontario     is located north of Thunder Bay, Ontario about 125 air miles.
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Next:  My Story - Chapter 5
chapter five: turboprops!
                 One of most pilot’s goals is to progress to advanced aircraft,  and so eventually have a choice at living in larger cities and thus improve  one’s lot in life through an increasing standard of living, all the while doing  what he/she enjoys the most - flying aircraft!  I was no exception, and  continued to send out resumes in a search for a larger aircraft to fly and more  things to learn.  I was soon contacted by Calm Air, then of Lynn Lake, Manitoba,  who were continually looking for pilots and copilots to crew their  DeHavilland Twin Otters.  
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            You no longer flew alone,     but had a flying partner (Captain and First Officer) to make double sure     that the aircraft was operated in a safe manner.  Having another crewmember     looking over one’s shoulder was a whole new world.  You now had to operate     as a team instead of a one man band.  New skills were learned as one     progressed in his career!  Frankly though, from time to time I also found an     increased frustration level, especially if one had to work closely all day     with someone he did not necessarily appreciate!  A few painful learning     times were experienced to say the least! |  | |||||||||||
               When Mom and Dad came to visit me in Thompson, MB,  I was able to take Dad up to  Churchill, MB and Rankin Inlet, NWT with me for a few days.  I think Dad also  came for a ride with me up to Chesterfield Inlet, NWT and Whale Cove, NWT.    The starter cord on my Ski-doo broke while Dad was visiting me, and I was  frustrated that we couldn’t go for a ride together.  Since it was so cold, Dad  probably didn’t care.
                   While  in Rankin, Dad spoke at the local native Pentecostal church which was run by a  minister from Edmonton.  That minister was later killed in his Aztec, taking  some students to their Bible school.  Apparently, it was a weather-related  accident.  Brian Childs, one of our pastors in Kelowna, later married this  pastor’s widow.
             Since I was friends with  Keith, the local airport fuel man, Dad and I were invited to his house for  dinner.  Although he was originally from England, he had an Eskimo wife who  prepared food native-style.  We were served caribou steaks with vegetables the  night of our visit.  During the meal, Dad got talking about various types of  wild meat.  That got Keith talking about a few delicacies he had, one of which  was “rotten walrus”.
               Basically the recipe for “rotten walrus” is to set it on the shelf until it  turns green, and then to freeze it.  Apparently, at least according to Keith,  they  “eat it like candy”.  As we were leaving, he again mentioned to us that we  had to try his “rotten walrus” before we left.  I politely refused, but my Dad  wanted to make a good impression so he said he’d try a bit of it.  Keith walked  over to his freezer and cut off a piece with his knife and gave it to Dad, who  put it in his mouth..  We said goodnight to them, and left for the walk home.   Once we got outside, Dad who had kept the slice of “rotten walrus” in the corner  of his mouth, began to spit it out onto the ground.  I sure thought that was  funny!  Dad claimed it was the worst thing he’d ever tasted!
             After a year or so, another airplane the Beechcraft  King Air 90 was added to the list of airplanes flown as a copilot, and soon  the Chief Pilot Ok’d me for my Twin Otter Captaincy in 1982.  With an increased  responsibility also came a great increase in income!  Routes flown for Calm  Air included nearly all of Manitoba and most of the western coastal areas of  the Northwest Territories especially around the northern base of Rankin Inlet,  NWT.
            I also went on to fly the B-90 Beechcraft King Air turboprop, and in the  80's the AC 690 Grumman Turbo Commander, which I loved.  The Turbo  Commander job was for an investment brokerage, Gordon Capital in Toronto, under  the non-descript alias of Starline Aviation.  I flew around many of the top  business leaders of the time including 3 future prime ministers, Jean Chretien,  Paul Martin, and John Turner.  While employed with this brokerage, I was  able to fly their business jet, the Citation as well.  Years later,  the experience with the business flights was beneficial in other ventures I was  involved with.
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Kelowna Capital     News, January 26, 1994 
    Executive Charter Launched 
   The     operators of a new executive plane charter service say hiring a sleek,     five-seat Cessna Conquest to get you and friends or business associates of     Kelowna and back is not the expensive luxury one might think. 
   “It’s     really quite affordable,” says chief pilot Mark Howson of Southern Interior     Flight Centre (SIFC), the Kelowna Airport-based company which started up the     charters recently as Kelowna’s first professional executive service. 
   “And     there’s the market for such a service in Kelowna now with its rapid growth     and status as a business centre.” 
   Based on     five persons in a charter group, the price is $ 226 each return Kelowna-Vancouver,     compared to $353 for full-fare economy on a commercial flight - the fare     most business people have to pay. (Other destinations are calculated on a $3     per air mile formula, meaning a return flight to Calgary would be $311 each     based on a group of five, Victoria $256 and Edmonton $437. 
   For     every hour in the air, the group can have the plane wait for the return     flight for two hours on the ground. 
   For     example, since the Kelowna-Vancouver flight is an hour each way, the plane     will wait four hours at Vancouver International Airport for free for the     return flight.  Additional waiting hours are $50 each. 
   “We say     it’s ideal for a group traveling for either business or pleasure,” adds     Howson.  “It could be a group going to a business meeting or some friends     heading to a concert or sporting event.” 
   While     one other Kelowna company does offer a small passenger plane charter     service, Howson says SIFC’s is the first and only ‘executive’ service. 
   With     leather seats, a bar and club seating (seats facing each other for     conversation), Howson says the inside of the plane is “first class”. | 
| 
        I really have enjoyed flying the     Beech 1900D.  While many of my first officers begin their career on this     aircraft, it has taken me many years to get to it and so perhaps I may     appreciate it more than the others I work with! 
   Also the     regional commuter schedule seems to fit family life! |  | |||||||||||
Next:  My Story - Chapter 6
chapter six: mission “africa”
                The aviation business is a cyclical business.  That is  to say, the welfare of most commercial operators follows close behind whatever  the economy happens to be doing at the time. 1984 was one of the tougher years  in Canadian aviation history,  and early in 1984, I began to find out more about  and even applied for, working for Mission Aviation Fellowship (MAF).  While  based at the company base in Thompson, Manitoba, I remember getting down on my  knees at my bedside with the resume sealed in the envelope, earnestly  seeking  God’s will through prayer about this part of my life.  I then remember walking  down to the mailbox to post the letter.  I’d learned of MAF through a Calm Air  mechanic[1] and pastor’s son who had just returned from a year in Ethiopia on a World Vision  / MAF partnership program.  
                In 1984, not long after I applied to MAF,  I was  laid off from Calm Air and after a few months stay with Aunt Eleanor (Webber) in  Winnipeg, I  was flown down to Redlands, California[2] for an interview with MAF.  After a week’s orientation with MAF, I was offered a  position as Twin Otter[3] captain for their Ethiopia program.  However, I did not rush into accepting the  offer.  
                The lush California citrus groves were an amazing site  for a young Canadian northern bush pilot, more accustomed to pine, birch and  arctic tundra.  I recollect the kind treatment from the sincere, mature,  christian MAF recruiters at headquarters.  They left quite an indelible  impression as servants of the Lord Jesus Christ.  These were the folks that  still carried on the work that martyr Nate Saint had begun with the Aucca  Indians in Ecuador,  South America decades earlier.
                However, joining MAF still was not an easy decision to  make.  Venturing from one’s familiar surroundings and family in Canada for  unknown lands and challenges beyond, would need a lot of thought.  MAF had  described it as a  6-month contract.  “Contract”, meant commitment; - staying  with the program whether or not one would enjoy the experience.  Six months to a  young man seemed like an eternity.  I promised to call MAF soon after I’d gotten  back to Canada.  Somewhere over the Midwest, halfway home from California, in  the back of the jetliner, the decision-wrestling stopped.  The answer was “Yes,  I’ll dare to trust the Lord and go to Ethiopia”.  I remember being at peace with  my decision. This affirmative response to Ethiopia apparently surprised the  recruiter[4].  He’d been sure Mark was going to say “No”.
| 
     Landing in Jinka, Southwestern Ethiopia | 
 Ethiopia proved to be such a very positive time of growth for Mark.      So many horizons were expanded.  So many challenges both professionally and     personally were met.  I remain convinced that God placed so many people of     great character in my way for my benefit.  To observe missionaries pouring     out decades of their life as servants of mighty God was a sight that never     can be forgotten.   | 
                 To hear and sense their heart’s desire to see things  accomplished for God among mere African peasants was so precious to behold.   To  be a part of their bible studies and sense excitement and deep appreciation for  the Word of God and a deep sense of purpose for their lives was something never  to forget.  Whoever said that “You’ll be the same person 10 years from now,  except for the books you read and the people you meet”, said it right!
Next: My Story - Chapter 7
chapter seven: things wrought by prayer
Sweet Hour of Prayer
| 
Sweet hour of prayer! sweet hour       of prayer! 
That calls me from a world of       care, 
And bids me at my Father's throne 
Make all my wants and wishes       known. 
In seasons of distress and grief, 
My soul has often found relief 
And oft escaped the tempter's       snare 
By thy return, sweet hour of       prayer! | 
Sweet hour of prayer! sweet hour       of prayer! 
The joys I feel, the bliss I       share, 
Of those whose anxious spirits       burn 
With strong desires for thy       return! 
With such I hasten to the place 
Where God my Savior shows His       face, 
And gladly take my station there, 
And wait for thee, sweet hour of       prayer! | 
| 
Sweet hour of prayer! sweet hour       of prayer! 
Thy wings shall my petition bear 
To Him whose truth and       faithfulness 
Engage the waiting soul to bless. 
And since He bids me seek His       face, 
Believe His Word and trust His       grace, 
I'll cast on Him my every care, 
And wait for thee, sweet hour of       prayer! | 
Sweet hour of prayer! sweet hour       of prayer! 
May I thy consolation share, 
Till, from Mount Pisgah's lofty       height, 
I view my home and take my flight: 
This robe of flesh I'll drop and       rise 
To seize the everlasting prize; 
And shout, while passing through       the air, 
"Farewell, farewell, sweet hour of       prayer!" | 
                 It has been said, “Faith may move mountains, but prayer moves the hand of God!”   Throughout my life, whether by personal experience or  through learning the lives of bible heroes in Scripture, I have been awestruck  many times where it has made been so clear to me how God has divinely intervened  on behalf of those who called on Him, and thereby changing the course of events.
Salvation for the Wayward
| 
Red Lake Men’s Fellowship -     circa 1960’s 
Front     Row (L to R): Cliff     Cassidy, Fred Harder, Wes Howson, Ivan Bjorkand, Tony Gugliotta, Tony Parisi      Second Row (L to R): Paul Cassidy,  Delbert Duncalf (?), Unknown,     Gerry Larson, Fred Howson | 
   One of     the first examples in my experience with God was as a child in the 1960’s,     attending Red Lake Pentecostal Assembly, in northwestern Ontario with my     parents.  I vividly remember a well appreciated man in our assembly, who     regularly, and persistently cryed out to God for his wayward son.        
   Cliff     Cassidy, operated several jewelry stores in the area.  I admired him for his     apparent exemplary, consistent walk with God, his leadership skills in the     church, which were clearly relational in nature, and his basic kindness to     me.  | 
When a visiting evangelist would happen by,  he would take him out and  buy him a new suit and give him a gold watch from his store. He sometimes  extended credit to the natives when most would not, and so enjoyed relations  with them as well.  However, besides being a great all around guy, he had a  discernable passion for the Lord, and for the lost, especially for the salvation  of his son, Paul who he informed us had become wayward.
                 I had always thought Paul was kind of a cool guy and in a way I sort of looked  up to him as one of the “big guys” in our church. Perhaps I looked up to him  because he was about 10 years older and seemed so much more mature than I was.   Perhaps it was how tough he was in the “street-fighting” type of horseplay I saw  him engage in after church, when our parents were either socializing or  praying.  I really don’t know.  However, I do know that for some reason I  respected him 
                 So knowing a bit about Brother Cassidy’s son (Christians called each other  Brother and Sister back then) I began to develop a tenderness to the cry of his  heart, even though I was only a lad.  As my father was pioneering a Sunday  School in Madsen, a small town not far from Red Lake, we would take in all of  our own services in the Madsen church, Sunday afternoon and Children’s Hobby  Club on Monday evenings, as well as all the services and programs of the Red  Lake Assembly - a total of at least 7 or 8 services in a given week.  Since most  of the services were at the Red Lake Assembly, Cliff would be found praying for  Paul during the morning and evening Sunday services as well as the mid-week  service, always with tears of earnestness streaming down his face.  
On one particular Sunday morning, even as just a child of about 10 or 11  years old, my spirit began to weigh heavy as I listened again to this father’s  cry for his son.  I must say that I have not often felt God’s Spirit move in my  life, prompting me to prayer, the way he did that day, and nothing similar has  happened subsequently. 
Somehow in my own simple childlike faith, a heavy burden had been placed  upon my heart to pray non-stop all the remainder of that Sunday for this  teenager’s salvation.  Thirty years later I still can remember in my mind’s eye  that scene as I vigorously, intensely prayed all afternoon for God to save Paul.  As I remember it, it seemed that nothing else mattered to me that day.   I  remember simply trusting God and petitioned him over and over again for his  salvation.
We drove the 18 or so miles home to our house in Madsen, where I  continued to pray expectantly, yet non-verbally - immersed in my own private  call to God for his answer. Similarly, later that afternoon on the drive back to  the Red Lake church for the evening church service I continued to intercede,  somehow sensing God was going to answer.
Well you can imagine my delight when to everyone’s surprise, Paul walked  into that Sunday night service and slumped into one of the back rows, looking as  cool as a late teen of 19 can look.  He hadn’t attended the church in a long  while, so he certainly had everybody’s attention.  I remember being ecstatic  when I saw him!  I remember the tears in my eyes, I remember the excitement in  my stomach, I remember saying to myself determinedly,  “God is going to save  him”, yet I continued to pray for him during the service, not wanting to let go  until he was at the altar and the battle was won.  Later during that service, I  witnessed Paul making his way to the altar and committing his life to God, as  God was so faithful in his response to me.   I remember going into the foyer and  sending cries of rejoicing heavenward.  “God your so REAL, Thank you, Lord,  Thank You Jesus.” 
Despite witnessing what I felt was a direct answer to my prayer, I kept  that prayer battle to myself as a personal victory, not sharing it with anyone,  probably due to shyness more than anything else.  Soon after that time at the  altar, Paul went off to Bible School, and as years wore on, my Dad went on to  pastor another community in Manitouwadge, Ontario, and we thus left that active  assembly at Red Lake and went separate ways.  I however would from time to time  hear reports of Paul’s ministry through our denominations’ publication, “The  Testimony”, and would remind myself of “that time in Red Lake when God  answered my prayer.” 
 I never saw Paul Cassidy again until probably about 25 years later,  when I quite coincidentally sat beside him in a small Baptist church near Stowe,  Vermont, and was introduced to “the other guy from Canada”, by the local pastor  who didn’t know either of us.  At the time, I was employed as a corporate pilot  to a stockbroker, and flew business jet and turboprop aircraft with Gordon  Capital all over the US, Canada and the Bahamas.  During the mid-1990’s the firm  was an aggressive New York and Toronto Bay Street stockbroker.  The wealthy  president could afford regular private airplane trips, and would enjoy time away  in the pretty countryside of Vermont nearly every weekend where he had his  country mansion with all the trimmings.  My co-pilot and I would fly him there  in his private aircraft getting him away from the pressure of the high demands  of his job.
My parents had taught me to attend the Lord’s house on Sunday, even when  we were on our vacation.  I have thus always sought out a church when I was away  from my own church, especially for Sunday services (although my co-worker’s  thought it was kind of a strange practice).  That is probably a similar reason  as to why Paul was in the same church.  He was in Stowe, Vermont for some time  together with his wife.  I was quite surprised to see someone that I knew, when  I thought I was quite a long way from home.
As I said good-bye to them, I briefly hesitated, but decided to tell  Paul and Judy about “that time in Red Lake when God answered my prayer.”  That  was the first time I had told anyone the story.   At the time Paul, now a  minister with the Pentecostal Assemblies, was pastoring a church in Waterloo,  Ontario, and went on to pastor in Ottawa, and later was my own pastor at Evangel  in Kelowna, BC!
Now I am not so spiritually naïve as to think that I had won the battle  on the strength of my prayer alone.  At best that would be highly inaccurate,  and at worst quite false and a show of arrogance.  I also know how Cliff and  without doubt his wife Greta, and many others prayed without fail month after  month on their son’s behalf.  More accurately, prayer from my behalf probably  only added “more fighting angels” to the battle, perhaps in effect tipping the  balance in favour of victory.
In his christian novel, “This Present Darkness”, Frank Peretti  describes with graphic detail the conflict in the unseen real world of angels  and demons.  Demons dispatched to torment Christians and destroy the work of  God, are in turn beaten back by fighting angelic beings dispatched by the  prayers of the saints.  The net effect of the novel is to help the christian  understand how important prayer is in the life of the christian, and how battles  literally tip in the balance when enough people pray.  Spiritual kingdoms rise  up and strongholds are brought down on the strength of a church’s prayer life.
Resources for the Needy
                 At about age 33, I was challenged by an instructor of a course I had taken to  read the biography of George Mueller.  It was a powerful biography, and one that  challenged my prayer life like none before.  
George Mueller founded and operated a series of large orphanages in  England during the 1800’s.  What was especially impressive about George Mueller,  was his consistent, unwavering, and persistent faith in God, and particularly  his commitment to God through his prayer life.  He demonstrated  to Christians  how God could provide funds and resources in direct answer to prayer.  He  received millions of dollars in this way, not having asked anyone but God for  the answer to his prayer.  
His biography told how many times he would sit down at the table with  all the children and helpers, seemingly unfazed by the fact that there was no  food on the table, or otherwise in sight.  After pausing to give thanks to the  Lord for the meal, a knock on the door would come, and when the door was  answered, someone would be bringing a cooked turkey with the trimmings!  Story  after story was told about how George Mueller demonstrated that one could trust  God with both trivial and important issues!
George Mueller’s methods for determining the will of God:    “I seek  to get my heart into such a state that it has no will of its own in a given  matter.  When you’re ready to do the Lord’s will, whatever it may be,  nine-tenths of the difficulties are overcome.  Having done this, I don’t leave  the result to feeling or simply impression.  If I do so, I leave myself liable  to great delusion.
I seek the will of the Spirit of God  through, or in connection with, God’s Word.  The Spirit and the Word must be  combined.  If I look to the Spirit alone without the Word, I lay myself open to  great delusions also.  If the Spirit guides us, He’ll do it according to the  Scriptures, not contrary to them.
Next, I take into account  providential circumstances.  These often plainly indicate God’s will in  connection with His Word and Spirit.  I ask God in prayer to reveal His will to  me.
Thus, through prayer, the study of  the Word, and reflection, I come to a deliberate judgment, according to the best  of my ability and knowledge.  If my mind is thus at peace, and continues after  two or three more petitions, I proceed accordingly.  I have found this method  always effective in trivial or important issues.”
Next:  My Story - Chapter 8
chapter eight: the entrepreneur!
Protection for the Determined
The year prior to starting Okanagan Business Flights, my entrepreneurial   project, my wife and I hosted a young adults bible-study in our home.  While   doing a character study on the life of Nehemiah,  I was inspired by this great   restorer of the city of Jerusalem over 400 years before the birth of Christ.    What a man!  What determination!  What a prayer life!.  At every step of his   project, his path of faith was marked by fervent prayer to the Living God!     
| 
Kelowna Capital News article          
Executive flights ready for       takeoff 
   The       Valley has a new plane charter business with Okanagan Business Flights       taking to the air. 
   “You       don’t have to be Bill Gates or Ross Perot to be able to afford charter air       transportation,” says owner-pilot Mark Howson. 
         Howson, who’s based at Kelowna Airport, says at $ 1,324.00 for the       round trip to Vancouver, six executives can travel in club class luxury       for $200 each, less than the scheduled airlines regular short notice       prices. 
   The       Cessna 421 Golden Eagle plane seats six and has two crew. |  | 
           Having visited Jerusalem in December of 1983, I had walked along the top   of the Jerusalem city wall, and so relived each chapter of Nehemiah in vivid   detail, my remembrance of that visit being still very much alive.  Despite   tremendous odds, Nehemiah pressed onward in his cause.  Imagine his tenacity   in the face of opposition, blending prayer and watchfulness with faith and   action.        
“ But we prayed to our God and   posted a guard day and night to meet this threat. . . .Also our enemies said,   “Before they know it or see us, we will be right there among them and will   kill them and put an end to the work” . . . .”Don’t be afraid of them.   Remember the Lord, who is great and awesome”
. . . When our enemies heard that   we were aware of their plot and that God had frustrated it, we all returned to   the wall, each to his own work. From that time on, half of my men did the   work, while the other half were equipped with spears, shields, bows and   armor.  The officers posted themselves behind all the people of Judah who were   building the wall.  Those who carried materials did their work with one hand   and held a weapon in the other, and each of the builders wore his sword at his   side as he worked. Neh. 4:9-18”
Help to the Helpless
At other times, scripture teaches that there is a time to wait quietly   before the Lord as Moses did despite being pursued by Pharaoh’s army.      
“As Pharaoh approached, the   Israelites looked up, and there were the Egyptians, marching after them.  They   were terrified and cried out to the Lord. . . . Moses answered the people, “Do   not be afraid.  Stand firm and you will see the deliverance the Lord will   bring you today.  The Egyptians you see today you will never see again.    The Lord will fight for you; you need only to be still.” Ex. 14:13,14.”
Years have passed since studying this story through the radio ministry   of Chuck Swindoll, I still can not help but be inspired by this great scene.    As only Chuck could say it, “ . . when hemmed in on all sides - between the   devil and the deep, Red sea - we are forced to look up.”
              The reason I mentioned the above bible stories, was because they were not   unlike some of the victories and some of the adversaries and adversities I   encountered in my entreprenerial venture.  The condensed version of the   Okanagan Business Flights story goes something like this.  The firm I was   working for was bought out by a dishonest employer.  I prayed and was   encouraged through a bible study on Nehemiah I did as a small home group   leader.  I had mad a decision to leave my employment and begin a small   charter airline.  Not long afterward,  I sensed God's overwhelming   love for me one   day while driving and praying about my situation.  It gave me the   confidence that God was with me no matter what the outcome of my venture was   going to be.   A   business plan was put together and my plan began to take shape, based on a   business course I'd taken at the local college. 
             I began to   pray for some startup funds.  An unsolicited letter arrived in the mail    with a promise of $ 20,000.00 for cashflow and through tears I began to thank   God for the start of the answer to my prayers.  I submitted an   application for a government grant (Self-Employment Assistance program), and   through the course of the year I was given $ 18, 000.00 towards my business,   and it included further training on accounting and marketing.  Another   individual gave me $ 49,000.00 unsolicited, for a deposit on an aircraft.    I soon submitted my business plan for bank approval to get the balance of the   needed funds, but when it was rejected, there was more prayer.  Another   individual, again unsolicited, arranged an operating loan for $ 50,000.00.    With these funds now in hand the bank was ready to loan the required balance.    Soon an aircraft was located in Florida and purchased, which I flew to Kelowna   from Miami in the summer of 1996.
             I immensely enjoyed my own business.   After operating OBF Ltd. for   a year though, several things became clear to me.  First of all, I was   spending nearly all of my waking hours working on my business. This was all to   the detriment of my family life as Baby Ryan was now with us, and I didn't   want my time all taken up with the business and have none left for my family.    I hadn't counted on paying such a high price in this regard.     Second of all, although I was seeing repeat business starting to happen, I was   finding that maintenance costs were much higher than I'd imagined.      I made a decision to seek employment as a pilot working for someone else and   then lease the company aircraft to an operator in Northern Manitoba, Skyward   Aviation, for ambulance use.   Years have passed since making this   difficult decision, and I know it was for the best.  Several years later,   this aircraft was sold and I flew it down to the new owner in Carlsbad,   California.  This venture had been bittersweet, as it was probably the   most fulfilling job I've had in aviation, flying business people all over   western Canada and the USA.  
Next:   My Story - Chapter 9
chapter nine: the search!
                On July 27, 1991 during a simple ceremony in a rented Port Credit,  Ontario church,  I slipped a tiny, elegant diamond ring on my bride’s hand.  As  the minister (my dad) united Andrea and I in marriage, a few friends and family  looked on.  As the minister drew near to facilitate the promises we were making  that day before God, etched forever in my memory is the way Andrea looked at me,  her big bright eyes beaming through tears, and silently mouthed the words, “It’s  happening”.  Our search for a “Significant Other” was finally  concluding before this very altar.  Only the two of us were aware that inside our  gold bands were inscribed the scripture reference 1 John 4:19 which says, “We love, because He first loved us.”  As christians, those words  summarized the reason that there had been the coming together of these two  lives.  Moreso for me, this ceremony marked the end of a long, long search for  someone to share my dreams with.   And what an absolute fine prize my search was  rewarded with!  My dear Andrea enrichens and complements every aspect of my  life!  I believe that she was a remarkable gift from God to me.  When we married  I felt like I’d just found a missing piece of my heart!
                  So how do I pass on to those following behind me, a least a few  of the secrets learned in my search?  Do I remain silent, then hope and pray  that those following in my footsteps will stumble across their mate too, perhaps  “coaching” them only when they ask me.  (What if they never ask me?)  Or rather  should I tell my story, point out the pitfalls that I have  identified and perhaps remind them of what God says in His Word regarding the  subject, and after arming them with that information, then release them to God’s  providence and protection?  Thus this is how it happened for me and this is my love story.
     Thinking back to my kindergarten years, I recall my first interest  in the opposite sex.  I remember being infatuated with a 4 year old classmate,  who seemed to enjoy me tickling her toes as we sat around the floor in a  circle.  However, by the time I entered my teen years, I was very shy and quite  introverted in my expressions of interest toward the opposite sex, and often  preferred to allow the gals to initiate, or at least indicate their interest in  any social interaction, with only friendship as an ultimate goal before I showed  too much interest.  
However, as one emerges out of puberty, the attraction for the opposite  gender markedly increases, especially approaching the late teen years.  It then  is worth undergoing even the embarrassing awkwardness, (including the big risk  the “special” person would say “no”) of asking someone special out for  the first date, just to spend time together.  What fun times full of innocent  laughter can be derived from time spent together on a date with that special  person!  Yet what peril can befall a young person when no limits are placed on  the physical progression between the sexes beginning with the first touch.  
Given the current trends in divorce and marriages today as we approach  the end of the 1990’s, it is obvious our society is in grave danger.   With the  divorce rate now at 50% in Canada,  I shudder to think of what the state of the  family will be in when my children are of marrying age.  I am saddened to  realize that most children today in our society will be clueless as to what  family life is all about.  Most will never themselves be passed on any value  system, let alone a godly example.  Most will soon grow up in single parent  families.
Finding the right match in a mate for many is described as difficult as  best.  Many in fact,  not ever find a suitable mate at all.  Some rather settle  for second best in place of waiting for God’s timing.  By second best, I mean  that often people settle for someone who is a poor match, or someone who comes  with lots of baggage from previous relationships.  I’m so very grateful that I  married a woman without a mountain of baggage.  Sadly, some for whatever reason are  unable to find a mate at all and are thus single for the duration of their  life.  Just as sadly, many find the right mate but through, carelessness,  neglect of nurturing, or premature intimacy allow the right person to slip  through their hands, as water slips through a sieve.  Perhaps this occurs  through divorce, or through ignorance of simply not understanding how to deal  with conflict.  Conflict by the way is not necessarily unhealthy, and is  inevitable in human relationships.  An unrealistic or a too-high list of  expectations also becomes a barrier to finding a reasonable match.
While in my mid-20’s, I began reading a series of books, (probably more  than thirty in all) by relevant christian authors who offered advice on  “dating-mating-relating” issues and were geared to help young people make  decisions.  In retrospect, I’m eternally grateful to these authors and the  wisdom they imparted to my impressionable, searching mind.  They instilled me  with the confidence of knowing that someday I would be married to someone very  significant who would want to care about me, and would want to trust me with her  dreams.  Someone who was worth waiting for.  They taught me the importance of “standing  alone” during the many (sometimes painful) years (shall I say more than a  decade) of waiting.  I'm offering this chapter as a help to whoever may  find it helpful as their own story unfolds.
Author Elisabeth Elliot[1] writes in her book “Keep A Quiet Heart”: 
A Man Moves Toward Marriage   (E. Elliot)
Letters keep   coming from both men and women who are in a quandary about how one ought to   move toward marriage. While I was sitting here, rereading some of them, a man   phoned with a question about the same subject. I wonder what is happening. Why   so much confusion? Here's one of the letters:
"I'm a male   Christian who needs help. I just ended a long-term 'relationship' with a   non-Christian girl. I made plenty of compromises during those years, and by   God's grace I hope next time will be better. I read your book The Mark of a   Man and was shown things I never knew before which blew my mind. I'm excited   about the idea of sharing life with a girl in a way which would honor Jesus.   At the same time I get scared about making bad moves, when to initiate, and   financial fears about supporting a family if I'm a missionary, which at the   moment I'm being directed to. These things may seem silly but they're real to   me. Could you address some issues which could benefit us guys who see marriage   as a blessing and not as years of imprisonment?"
No, the   questions do not seem silly to me--far from it. They are vital questions, and   I'm glad there are men to whom they matter enough to pray about and ask   counsel for.
I think one   reason for confusion is the notion which arose, before the men who are now in   their twenties and thirties were born, about the "equality" of the sexes. It   is a word that belongs to politics but certainly not to courtship, a realm   which concerns human beings in their entirety.
Another   reason for confusion is misunderstanding the order which God established in   the beginning. I've tried to explain that divine arrangement in two books: Let   Me Be a Woman and The Mark of a Man. If men would be men, women could do a   better job of being women (and vice versa, of course, but the buck really   stops with the men). What does it mean to be a man?
Christ is the   supreme example. He was strong and He was pure, because His sole aim in life   was to be obedient to the Father. His very obedience made Him most   manly--responsible, committed, courageous, courteous, and full of love. A   Christian man's obedience to God will make him more of a man than anything   else in the world. Consider these qualities:
Responsibility.   He must work out the salvation that God has given him "with a proper sense of   awe and responsibility, for it is God who is at work" in him, giving him the   will and the power to achieve His purpose (Philippians 2:12, 13, PHILLIPS).   Man was made to be initiator, provider, protector for woman.
Commitment.   He must be a man of his word, no matter what it costs. My father's strong   counsel to my four brothers: Never tell a woman you love her until you are   ready to follow that immediately with, "Will you marry me?" In other words, a   man's love for a woman, if deep and abiding, leads to a lifetime commitment to   her. Many heartaches would be avoided if he held back any expressions of love   until he is ready to make that commitment. Once promised, he never goes back   on that word.
Courage.   A man must be willing to take the risks of rejection (she might say No),   blame, and all that commitment costs.
Courtesy.   A Christian's rule of life should be: my life for yours. He is concerned about   the comfort and happiness of others, not of himself. He does not seek to have   his own needs met, his own image enhanced, but to love God, to make Him loved,   and to lay down his life to that end. In small ways as well as great, he shows   the courteous love of the Lord.
Purity.   He must be master of himself if he is to be the servant of others. This means   "buffeting" his body, bringing it into subjection, as Paul did. It means   restraint, discipline, the strength to wait. It means an utter yielding to the   will of God as revealed in 1 Corinthians 6:12-20 and 1 Thessalonians 4:2-8.
As I have   heard the sad stories and studied what I call "The Dating Mess" of today, it   appears to me that men have generally overlooked another vital matter which   ought to precede all overtures in the direction of a prospective wife. If we   assume that a man is an adult when he is eighteen (or twenty-one at the   latest), he should by that time be giving marriage some serious thought. He   should get down to brass tacks with God to find out if this may be a part of   His agenda for him. This will take time, and it might help if during this   period he simply quits dating and starts praying. As long as the answer is   uncertain, don't date. Does this sound extreme? It wasn't my idea. I learned   it from a group of young men who have chosen this way. It is a guaranteed way   of avoiding sexual activity (always illicit outside of marriage), of   preserving one's wholeness and holiness, and of preventing the heartbreaks we   see on every hand.
I urge you to   trust God. He wants to give you the best. He will help you. He has promised to   guide. He knows what you need. Ask Him to show you whether, when, and whom you   should marry.
And don't be   alone in this. Ask counsel of your spiritual superiors who are wise, who know   how to pray and how to keep silence. Take their counsel seriously. If they   have suggestions as to a possible mate, take those very seriously. My own   parents prayed for godly spouses for all six of us, and actually named before   God the very people that four of us married.
Read Genesis   24, study the principles Abraham's servant followed. Pray silently. Watch   quietly.
Before you   start dating, draw clear guidelines for yourself as to "how far to go." The   only truly safe line is a radical one, but it works: hands off and clothes on.   If you think you can put the line somewhere else, remember that a little thing   leads on to a bigger thing. A touch leads to a hug which leads to a kiss which   leads to play which leads to consummation. That was how God intended the whole   thing to work, but the idea of the "whole thing" was marriage and babies.
Can you trust   yourself to quit once you start? The Bible says, "Flee youthful lusts." Don't   toy with them.
When God has   guided you as to the whether, the when, and the whom, then you must choose to   love and not to fear. The Will of God always involves risk and cost, but He is   there with grace to help and with all the wisdom you need. Every deliberate   choice to obey Him will--depend upon it--be attacked by the enemy. Never mind.   Nothing new about that. Be a man and stick with it. 
Christian authors pointed out so clearly the importance of prayer in my  life, and how God’s Word was extremely relevant to my case.  They helped  map out my needs, intellectual, spiritual, physical, emotional.  They helped me  understand how each of the genders think,  what drives and needs are  characteristic to either sex.  Books helped informed me for example that since I  was a first-born male, studies on birth order  [2] suggested that I might want to consider that the best choice was perhaps someone  who is a last-born or youngest girl in her family.
Perhaps because of  my extensive study of dating-mating and relating  issues, I was able to somewhat accurately identify the “right” person  when God finally brought her my way.  But what do I actually mean when I say I  wanted to find the “right” person?  Chuck Swindoll, my favourite bible  teacher maintains it is actually more important to “be” the right person,  than to find the right person.  Ah, yes!  In my reading I also discovered  he was right!
When I was nineteen,  I had my first real “girlfriend”.  We began an  somewhat rocky, off and on relationship that lasted about a year, roughly  coinciding with my beginning relationship with aviation until I obtained my  commercial pilot’s license.  I found I had gained a new sense of significance to  know that someone out there cared enough (about me) to want to spend time  exclusively with me.  Someone wanted to share my hopes and dreams! - which at  that time consisted mostly of my car, an orange 1972 Oldsmobile Cutlass coupe,  and my airline aspirations, then embodied in the form of a Piper Cherokee.  
I was however soon horrified to find out that she wanted to get married  and get out of her parents’ hair!  At the time, nothing could have been further  from my plans as marriage was!  As much as I liked her, the time was not right  for me to commit to a marriage while I was still plotting my career strategy.   Although the relationship deteriorated, it was well over a year before I was  able to say I had recovered from the emotional pain of the loss of the  relationship.   The pain seemed never destined to dull: but ultimately it does  and you go on to other things.  She went on to marry about a year subsequent to  our breakup, and I decided to pursue a helicopter course in northern Ontario at  Sault Saint Marie.  
Love at first sight?
                  It was 1990.  I had driven from my apartment in Brampton  to Toronto to attend Stone Church’s Monday evening young adults service,  attended by around 150 other young people.  The greeter at the door, an  attractive, blonde, young lady greeted me as I walked through the door to the  old church sanctuary.  I was immediately drawn to her, sensing we would be  seeing a lot of each other, and even a strong hunch that we would end up  together as man and wife!  
A brief conversation ensued, as we exchanged the familiar and basic  greeting data of name,  vocation and miscellany other details one opens a  first-time greeting with.  After finding my seat, I watched her as she continued  in her role at the door, then made her way to her seat for the evenings’  service.  Hmm!
                 As one plays the dating game, one of the rules, albeit unspoken, is that you  don’t reveal your desires too early, at least not until there are some signs  that the other person has arrived at somewhat similar conclusions as you have.
Andrea came into my life as a young, feminine, bouncy, desirable  carefree young lady school teacher who had made the most of her twenty-five  years.  In her decisions, she had not been careless in selecting of friends, had  worked hard in her pursuit of academic excellence, had served before the leaders  of the land (literally, as a “Page” in Canada’s federal parliament) during her  time in the House of Commons, and had been an international traveler long before  I caught up with her in Toronto, living in several European nations for several  years.  Also, as I found out, she had decided to remain pure in her  relationships with those of the opposite gender.  Perhaps this is why only a few  minutes after first meeting Andrea, I had detected a particular vibrancy about  her, that immediately caught my attention.
True to my hunch, Mark and Andrea became friends, and soon thereafter,  they began dating.  The first date was a flight in Mark’s airplane, while  simultaneously taking it out for scheduled maintenance function.  We flew the  Turbo Commander up to Parry Sound one August evening, stopping for a walk  near the airport.  The memory lingers, still ever-fresh.  Hundreds of fireflies  flashed their beacons in the moonless Muskoka summer evening sky.  We chased  them for a while as we walked the road to the highway.  I sensed Andrea’s  spirit, as we began our first few awkward steps toward friendship, before flying  back to Toronto (Pearson) a few hours later.  
A few nights later, we attended a Toronto Blue Jays / Texas Rangers  (baseball) game, watching from a corporate booth that Mark’s company had at the  Toronto Skydome.  I don't think we  watched more than mere seconds of that game.  I do remember we talked for  hours there on the bench. 
 As  the relationship progressed, it was time to meet her parents.  I flew out to  Kelowna in Jan 1991, and there visited with Andrea’s Mom and Dad.  That  weekend we did some skiing at Silverstar and Big White.  It was a wonderful  weekend for us both.  As a major snowstorm was approaching the Okanagan  Valley, my visit there was cut short to enable me to get to Vancouver to ensure  I'd be able to get my flight back to Toronto.  Just before driving back to  Vancouver for the plane to Toronto, I realized that the time was drawing close  to a having a conversation with Andrea's dad that I'd been thinking of for some  time.  However, because of the developing snowstorm, the time had come for  it sooner than I'd planned on, and I hadn't quite worked out the way the words  were to come out.  Andrea was unaware of what I was going to talk to her  Dad about.    I asked Andrea to have her Dad to come downstairs  so I could thank him for accommodating me on my visit to Kelowna.  What I really  wanted to do was to ask permission to marry his daughter!  When he came  downstairs and I motioned him into his shop in the back basement room of their  orchard home.
Trying not to sound as nervous as I  really was, I told him that I thought a lot of his daughter, and wanted to know  if he would allow me to marry Andrea.  His reply put me at ease, and went  something like  ". . . .we've taught our daughters to make their own  decisions, and so that if it was all right with Andrea, then it was all right  with him”.  Before going out the door, I smiled and asked him not to  tell Andrea that I’d asked him about it for the time being (until we were  engaged).  
 It was later on that year (March 1991) when I proposed to Andrea.  Nothing  wild or fancy, but we'd been driving to Ottawa and chatting about many things,  when I thought it was the right time to ask her.  I stopped the car by the  side of the road and asked, "Will you marry me?"  She cried.
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              This “compound” picture     of Andrea and I was taken a few minutes after I asked Andrea to marry me.      The picture was actually made from two photos which were digitally joined     together on my computer.  I took a photos of Andrea, and Andrea a picture of     me.  We had stopped near a lake along the road from Ottawa to Kingston.      | 
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         [1] Elisabeth Elliot     is the former wife of MAF missionary pilot Jim Elliot who was martyred     during his work amoung the Aucca Indians of the Amazon in South America in     the 1940’s. “Keep A Quiet Heart” was published in 1997.
         [2] Birth Order:  the     study of how various placing by birth in one’s family (regarding oldest,     middle and youngest born children of each sex), may help determine how well     you interact/relate with people; this is a variation on the principle that     “opposites attract -but don’t get too different” theme.  Personalities are     thus complemented, mostly due to the way we interact with people in our     present world.  It also relates to how we interacted with siblings in our     family growing up.  Example: Two first-borns may tend to be in greater     conflict with each other, while two last borns may tend towards greater     passivity, and neither of these complement, and may not necessarily be     ideal.
Next: My Story - Chapter 10
Chapter ten: the truth on fire!
                In his autobiography (A   Man Called Mr. Pentecost),  David J. du Plessis recalled his 1956 meeting   with a number of ecumenical leaders from across America.  “Please tell us,”   asked one of the churchmen of this well-known pentecostal:
What is   the difference between you and us.  We quote the same Scriptures you do, and   yet when you say those words they sound so different.  We say the same things   that you do, but there seems to be a deeper implication in what you say.  You   have said nothing with which we want to differ and yet there seems to be a   distinct difference somewhere.
The “distinct difference” in the   pentecostal theology of missions is found in du Plessis’s reply:
           Gentlemen, comparisons are odious, and I do not with to injure anyone’s   feelings or hurt your pride.                     
            But the truth as I see it is this: You have   the truth on ice, and I have it on fire!
The Explosion of a Missionary Movement
                I would be quite   remiss and “my story” incomplete should I not include at least a few   paragraphs about the pentecostal movement I was born into.  In fact quite a   few paragraphs are rather in order.  Having been raised a Pentecostal pastors   son, I have more than a passing interest into learning about the background   factors which caused both Mom and Dad to realize God’s will and to decide on   enrollment into Pentecostal Bible schools.  My father enrolled in Eastern   Pentecostal Bible College (EPBC), at that time located in Toronto, while   simultaneously my mother enrolled in what was then Central Bible School in   Winnipeg.  
                 Exactly what happened   to bring this movement to it’s beginnings, and what are some of the details of   this movement that has shaped my life to such an enormous degree?  How did it   come to be known as the denomination with the fastest growth rate      [1]?    My parents were products of pentecostal colleges and “went forth as workers”   as it used to be said of those called.  I thus better understand who I am, and   better appreciate my family heritage and consequent values having done some   reading on the subject.  Since I could not hope to explain completely the   pentecostal heritage I was born into, I have done some reading to help me   understand the history of the Pentecostal Movement.  
                 In the book, “Azusa   Street and Beyond”    [2],   insight is given to this turn of the century phenomenon birthed by the Holy   Spirit.  Here is some material excerpted from this book which in fact I   enjoyed so much that nearly the entire first chapter and beyond has been   reproduced here below. The book begins with following newspaper clipping dated   1906, and goes on to discuss the Pentecostal Movement.  The newspaper article   reveals the scorn and opposition of clergymen and the secular press at the   time.
                   Breathing strange utterances and mouthing a creed which it would seem no sane   mortal could understand, the newest religious sect has started in Los   Angeles.  Meetings are held in a tumble-down shack on Azusa Street, near San   Pedro Street, and the devotees of the weird doctrine practice the most   fanatical rites, preach the wildest theories and work themselves into a state   of mad excitement in their peculiar zeal. (Los Angeles Times 1906)
                 Estimates of its size   in 1906 ranged from 13,000 to 15,000.  By the mid-1920’s it had, in the USA   alone, increased ten-fold.  By the time of its 50-year mark had reached at   least 10 million worldwide and had become known as “The Third Force in   Christendom.  Time magazine reported that this movement had 51 million   adherents in 1982, along with “another 11 million charismatic fellow-travelers   within the major Christian bodies.”
                The “Pentecostal   Explosion” at the advent of the twentieth century was not an isolated event.    Although Azusa Street seemed to be a focal point, especially from 1906 to   1908, the movement cannot be said to have been centered in any one place.
Leaderless leadership
               No main personality can be said to be the originator of the movement.  This,   said widely respected pentecostal spokesman Donald Gee, is:
 . . .   one highly significant feature of the Movement that distinguished it in a   striking was from most of those that have gone before.  The Pentecostal   Movement does not owe its origin to any outstanding personality or religious   leader, but was a spontaneous revival appearing almost simultaneously in   various parts of the world.  We instinctively connect the Reformation with   Luther, the Quakers with George Fox, Methodism with Wesley, the Plymouth   Brethren with Darby and Graves, the Salvation Army with William Booth, and so   on.  But the outstanding leaders of the Pentecostal Movement are themselves   the product of the Movement.  They did not make it; it made them (1949)
                 One well-known   product of the movement, David du Plessis, emphasized the leadership of the   Holy Spirit in the twentieth century as in the first-century church, and   underlined Gee’s emphasis that “there is no man who can claim to have been the   founder of this great worldwide Christian revival” (1958).
                 This phenomenon of   “leaderless leadership” and “denominationless dynamics” was not the result of   a “new emphasis on any special doctrine.  Rather, the emphasis is upon an   experience”.  Pentecostals have been known for their insistence upon the   necessity of experiencing God through the Holy Spirit.  They have historically   seen the Holy Spirit himself as the originator and impetus for world mission.    Gee said that the central attraction of the movement:
               . . . consisted purely of a powerful individual spiritual experience.  The   stress was not on any system of doctrine, for Arminians and Calvinists found   themselves on the same platforms, and teachers with diverse views upon   Holiness and Eschatology were conscious of a new, deep fundamental unity in   spirit.  Neither was the emphasis upon any ideas about Church government for   Episcopalians, Methodists, Brethren, Salvation Army members, and indeed some   from practically every section of the Church, participated in the Movement.    There was no particular cult or method practiced for if there was one thing   above another that marked the meetings it was their amazing diversity.
Pentecostal ecumenism
                 The explosion that   temporarily resulted in a “pentecostal ecumenism” was later to solidify into   more neatly marked doctrinal and governmental boundaries, but for the   meantime, says Larry Christenson, “Pentecostal Christianity in its formative   period had strong ecumenical tendencies.  The spontaneity and vitality of its   experience spread without too much regard for denominational boundaries.
A Student Movement
                 . . . it could also   be described as a “student movement” of sorts  The event that preceded Azusa   Street by five years and actually precipitated the revival in Los Angeles   began at the outset of the century in a student atmosphere.  Was it not in a   Bible School in Topeka, Kansas, where Charles Parham’s students searched the   Scriptures for evidences of a pentecostal experience?  Was it not a student   (Agnes N. Ozman) upon whom the Holy Spirit came during that prayer/study   vigil?  Was it not also a student who later came to Parham’s second school in   Houston, Texas?  This student
               . . . was destined to become another key figure in the story of the   Pentecostals:  W.J. Seymour, an ordained Negro minister.  It was Seymour who   carried the Pentecostal message to California, to one of the most famous   addresses in Pentecostal history:  312 Azusa Street, Los Angeles (Sherrill   1964)
Internal Elements
                 Additional reading   from two main sources can inform us as to the inner dynamics that made this   explosion possible.  One of them Christenson, delineates four basic elements   that were present in early pentecostalism.   First, he says, was the priority   of event “Pentecostal Christianity tends to find its rise in events which are   heralded as a demonstration of supernatural power and activity.”  There was,   in the second place, a mood of expectancy.  Pentecostal Christianity, he   notes, “is Christianity standing on tiptoe, expecting something to happen.”    The third element was fullness of life in the Holy Spirit, a fullness in which   “the Holy Spirit is the initiator of rich and varied Christian experience.  No   personal testimony is adequate, no worship service complete, without clear-cut   evidence of the presence and the activity of the Holy Spirit.”  Finally,   already introduced earlier, there was the paradox of ecumenism and   exclusivistic tendencies.  
                A second source for   further study is Chapter 5 of Nichol’s Pentecostalism in which he articulated   some fifteen “Causes for the Initial Success of Pentecostalism  (1966).”    In summary form they are:
 1.         A world   conditioned to expect the supernatural.
2.         Christians previously prepared to expect manifestations of the   Spirit.
3.         Emphasis upon experience rather than doctrine or church   government.
4.         Pentecostals’ self-image as a revitalization movement within the   Christian Church.
5.         An early thrust toward nominal Christians and lethargic believers   rather than to the unconverted.
6.         An appeal to the lower strata of American society.
7.         Taking initiative in going to people rather than waiting for them   to come to them.
8.         The use of mass meetings to create a sense of belonging to a   community.
9.         The effective use of newspaper/periodicals to disseminate the   pentecostal message.
10.      A democratic tendency which drew people of all classes with no   discrimination.
11.      Emphasis upon divine healing.
12.      Meeting psychological felt-needs of people.
13.      The conviction of early adherents that God had raised them up for a   special work.
14.      A tremendous spirit of sacrifice.
15.      The principle of establishing indigenous churches
Motivation
                To say that early   pentecostals were motivated and driven by a power beyond themselves would be a   classic understatement!  Their lifestyle and message proceeded from a   conviction that God was in their midst and had chosen them for a special   work.  It was this certainty, “the sense of reality that emanated from them,   which undoubtedly attracted people.  The Pentecostals were convincing, someone   has said, because they themselves were convinced”.  Their conviction is   measured on at least three levels of their experience:  theological   motivation, evangelistic zeal, and supernatural recruitment.
Theological Motivation
                Early pentecostals   were marked by their exactness in following a literal interpretation of   Scripture.  They sought to be people led by “The Book” and by the Holy   Spirit.  They saw themselves in the midst of a literal fulfillment of Joel   2:28-32    [3].    Whatever criticism is offered against their subjective interpretation of   Scripture and their high value upon experience, pentecostals have always   valued Scripture as God’s Word for today.  One of the earliest Azusa Street   alumni, Frank Bartleman, recalled, “In the beginning of the Pentecostal   outpouring I remember preaching for three hours one evening in the heart of   New York City.  And then the people wanted more.  Those were days of great   hunger for the Word of God”.  A Church of God minister, C.M. Padgett wrote in   the December 14, 1918, issue of the Church of God Evangel about the 
“Results of Sanctification.” One of them, he said, will be:
“Results of Sanctification.” One of them, he said, will be:
               The Word of God will be prized above all reading, to your soul it will be the   book of books; other reading matter will be secondary.  The newspaper will not   be allowed to crowd out the Word of God. (1918).
               Agnes Ozman, whose baptism in the Holy Ghost on January 1, 1901, signaled the   beginning of the modern Pentecostal Movement in America, was deeply motivated   by the Scriptures.  During her active involvement in mission work - visiting   elderly, praying for the sick, preaching and testifying - she realized:
 .   . . a need within.  And for about three weeks my heart became hungry for the   baptism of the Holy Ghost.  I wanted the promise of the Father more than ever   I did food or sleep.  On New Year’s night, January 1, 1901, near eleven   o’clock, I asked that prayer be offered for me and hands be laid on me to   fulfill all scripture, that I might receive the baptism which my whole heart   longed to have.
                 Immediately after her   controversial baptism in the Holy Ghost and its surrounding publicity, Agnes   Ozman and her Bible school colleagues went to the Scriptures:
               So we blessed God and gave thanks for all things, made a study of the   outpouring of the Holy Ghost.  We found the sign given when the former rain of   the Spirit was poured out was talking in tongues and magnifying Jesus as in   Acts 2:4.
                 But if their   experience was informed by the Word, their passion was fired by the Spirit.    They followed the precedent of holiness teachers such as Torrey, Moody, and   Simpson who saw that “the divine purpose in the baptism in the Holy Spirit was   an enduement with power for witnessing and service” (Gee 1961).  The   pentecostals believed that the new experience of the Holy Spirit was more than   and separate from their experience of sanctification.  The original statement   of faith from the first issue of The Apostolic Faith (Seymour’s paper   from the Azusa Street Mission) had a statement to that effect.
               The Baptism with the Holy Ghost is a gift of power upon the sanctified life .   . . Too many have confused the grace of Sanctification with the enduement of   Power.
                 Numerous testimonies   match the story of pioneer preacher Aaron A. Wilson, who “felt the call to   preach from a child, but when filled with the Spirit such a burden for lost   souls came upon me!’
                Motivation for lost   souls and the preaching of the gospel to all the world flowed from a life in   the Spirit and the literal instruction and modeling of Scripture, particularly   the book of Acts.  It was also literal words of Scripture and the prevailing   mood of premillennialism that provided yet another theological motivation: an   eschatological urgency.
                Eschatological urgency   is at the heart of understanding the missionary fervor of early pentecostalism.    Damboriena has accurately observed, “Understood as the theology of ‘last   things,’  eschatology belongs to the essence of Pentecostalism” and other   analysts, both sympathetic and non-sympathetic, have documented the symbiotic   relationship between premillennialism, dispensationalism and the Pentecostal   Movement.
                The early pentecostal   preachers believed that they were proclaiming the “End Time message”.  Their   early records revealed:
                . . . a close and abiding association between the baptism in the Holy Spirit   as evidenced by speaking in tongues for an enduement of power in Christian   witness, a fervent belief in the premillennial return of Christ and His   command to evangelize to the uttermost parts of the world.  This Baptism,   viewed as the fulfillment of Joel’s prophecy for “the last days” seemed to   heighten the imperative for world evangelism.
                 These pioneers   envisioned a revival that was going to touch and inspire every part of the   Christian Church, for they were representative of so many of its sections.    Above all things, says Gee, “Their hearts glowed with the expectation and   conviction that this was destined to be the last revival before the coming of   the Lord and that , for them all earthly history would soon be consummated by   the “Rapture”.  In telling the story of the West Central Council of the   Assemblies of God, Eugene N. Hastie takes note of a number of early   missionaries from the council who went before the formation of a missions   board.  On group, the Crouch family, left in 1912 for Egypt on a one-way   trip!  “The Crouch party,” says Hastie, “went mostly at their own expense,   expecting to remain there until the rapture, which they believed was very near   at hand” 
                A look inside the   Azusa Street paper, The Apostolic Faith, reveals interesting glimpses   of the urgency reflected in their times. Though somewhat lengthy, the   following quotations provide observers with the eschatological worldview of   early pentecostals.  This series covers a time period from September 1906 to   January 1908:
Many are   the prophesies spoken in unknown tongues and many visions that God is giving   concerning His soon coming.  The heathen must first receive the gospel.  One   prophecy given in an unknown tongue was interpreted, “The time is short, and I   am going to send out a large number in the Spirit of God to preach the full   gospel in the power of the Spirit”
               Similarly, another instance seems to be typical of the messages given in those   early days.  Headlined under “The Second Chapter of Acts,” it reads”
               A preacher’s wife, who at first opposed Pentecostal truth, went home and read   the second chapter of Acts, and while she read, the Spirit fell upon her and   she began to speak in tongues . . . As she was on the way to the church she   met a brother whom she had been instrumental in leading to the Lord.  He is a   foreigner and as soon as she saw him, she began to pour out here soul in   French.  He was amazed and said, “When did you learn French?”
                  “What did I say?” she asked.
                  “You said: ‘Get ready! Jesus is coming soon!’”
Evangelistic Zeal
                 Early pentecostal   missionaries were characterized with the watchword, “They went everywhere   preaching the gospel.”  Gary B McGee an Associate professor at the Assemblies   of God Theological Seminary claimed, “The history of  Pentecostalism cannot be   properly understood apart from its missionary vision.” Evangelism and missions   typified the movement, said Assemblies of God historian Stanley H. Frodsham   who asserted, “This Pentecostal revival has also been decidedly missionary   from the beginning”.
                Azusa Street   participants were flung from Los Angeles and other centers of pentecostal   worship into the far corners of the world.  In the years 1906 -1908   pentecostal missionaries began pressing “to the regions beyond”:
                   Whole families volunteered for the Word, sold their possessions, and started   for the field.  They were possessed with a passion to go to the ends of the   earth for their Lord, and no sacrifice seemed too great for them that the   gospel might be proclaimed and the coming of the Lord might be hastened.
                This early   evangelistic zeal was characterized by a spontaneity in sending forth   personnel without prearranged financial help.  Missionaries went strictly “by   faith.”  This was still before consolidation and the structural “means” of   missions.  The following story of an early Pentecostal Holiness missionary   typifies scores of stories which could be recounted:
                   Soon Miss Almyra Aston was also ordained by the Oklahoma Conference which met   at Oklahoma City August 25, 1911, and sent to India.  She had only ten dollars   toward her fare when she started for California, but God miraculously supplied   her need and on January 3, 1912 she sailed for Hong Kong.  Here she intended   to stay until God saw fit to provide passage to India, which He did, and in   due time she arrived at her destination where she labored for several years.
Canadian Origins
                 While attending   Sunnyside Camp at Sylvan Lake, Alberta in the summer of 1999,  I learned   somewhat startling tidbits of the heritage of our Canadian Pentecostal   Movement.  John Raymer a fourth generation Pentecostal was preaching on his   subject of “impartation”.  I have paraphrased his rendition of the story here   as well as I can remember.
           “In 1906, some members of an Evangelical Missionary church from the   Kitchener-Waterloo area, journeyed by train all the way down to Los Angeles   (long distance travel was not a small feat in itself for 1906) in order to   witness first hand the happenings at the Azusa street revival.  Upon returning   to their church in Canada, these people were hungry for all God had in store   for them and were eager to continue seeking God the way the people at the   Azusa Street revival were.  When they found that other people would not   support their pentecostal expression nor allow room for the work the Holy   Spirit wanted to do, a meeting of the powers that were in that church resulted   in a vote being cast against this new pentecostal expression. 
This   story is told in the PAOC archives and apparently verified by those that were   there, that as the men walked somberly out of the meeting having been voted   down, a white dove flew in the open window, circled the inside of the   church three times and then flew out the open window again!  This   church apparently is still standing, but through the years attendance fell and   a dryness reportedly has come over it!  Those that walked out of the meeting   were the early PAOC fathers who have since gone on to see the PAOC used   mightily of God while the other people in that church had literally voted   themselves out of God’s blessing.”
Pentecost Has Come
The Apostolic Faith Magazine [4]
September     1906                       First Issue
  Los Angeles Being Visited by a Revival
  of Bible Salvation and Pentecost as 
  Recorded in the Book of Acts
              The power of God now has this city agitated as never before.  Pentecost has   surely come and with it the Bible evidences are following, many being   converted and sanctified and filled with the Holy Ghost, speaking in tongues   as they did on the day of Pentecost.  The scenes that are daily enacted in the   building on Azusa Street and at missions and churches in other parts of the   city are beyond description, and the real revival is only started, as God has   been working with his children mostly, getting them through to Pentecost and   laying the foundation for a mighty wave of salvation amoung the unconverted.
            The meetings are held in an old Methodist church that had been   converted in part into a tenement house, leaving a large, unplastered   barn-like room on the ground floor.  Here about a dozen congregated each day,   holding meetings on Bonnie Brae in the evening.  The writer attended a few of   these meetings and being so different from anything he had ever seen and, not   hearing any speaking in tongues, he branded the teaching as third-blessing   heresy and thought that settled it.  It is needless to say that writer was   compelled to do a great deal of apologizing and humbling of himself to get   right with God.
            In a short time God began to manifest His power and soon the   building could not contain the people.  Now the meetings continue all day and   far into the night and the fire is kindling all over the city and surrounding   towns.
            Proud, well-dressed preachers came in to “investigate.”  Soon their   high looks are replaced with wonder, then conviction comes, and very often you   will find them in a short time wallowing on the dirty floor, asking God to   forgive them and make them as little children.
            It would be impossible to state how many have been converted,   sanctified and filled with the Holy Ghost.  They have been and are daily going   out to all points of the compass to spread this wonderful gospel.
The Old Time Pentecost
            This work began about five years ago last January, when a company of   people under the leadership of Charles Parham who were studying God’s word,   tarried for Pentecost in Topeka, Kansas.  After searching through the country   everywhere, they had been unable to find any Christians that had the true   Pentecostal power.  So they laid aside all commentaries and notes and waited   on the Lord, studying His word, and what they did not understand they got down   before the bench and asked God to have wrought out in their hearts by the Holy   Ghost.  They had a prayer tower from which prayers were ascending night and   day to God.  After three months, a sister who had been teaching sanctification   for the baptism with the Holy Ghost, one who had a sweet, loving experience   and all the carnality taken out of her heart, felt the Lord lead her to have   hands laid on her to receive the Pentecost.  So when they prayed, the Holy   Ghost came in great power and she commenced speaking in an unknown tongue.    This made all the Bible school hungry, and three nights afterward, twelve   students received the Holy Ghost, and prophesied, and cloven tongues could be   seen upon their heads.  They then had an experience that measured up with the   second chapter of Acts and could understand the first chapter of Ephesians.
            Now after five years something like 13,000 people have received this   gospel.  It is spreading everywhere, until churches who do not believe   backslide and lose the experience they have.  Those who are older in this   movement are stronger, and greater signs and wonders are following them.
            The meetings in Los Angeles started in a cottage meeting, and the   Pentecost fell there three nights.  The people had nothing to do but wait on   the Lord and praise Him, and they commenced speaking in tongues, as they did   at Pentecost, and the Spirit sang songs through them.
            The meeting was then transferred to Azusa Street, and since then   multitudes have been coming.  The meetings being at about ten o’clock in the   morning and can hardly stop before ten or twelve at night, and sometimes two   or three in the morning, because so many are seeking, and some are slain under   the power of God.  People are seeking three times a day at the altar and row   after row of seats have to be emptied and filled with seekers.  We cannot tell   how many people have been saved, and sanctified, and baptized with the Holy   Ghost, and healed of all manner of sicknesses.  Many are speaking in new   tongues, and some are on their way to the foreign fields, with the gift of the   language.  We are going on to get more of the power of God.
Characteristics of Pentecostal Church Growth [5](by C. Peter Wagner)
To say that  this growth is phenomenal is an understatement.  The pentecostal movement is  less than 100 years old, young as such movements go.  Only 50 years ago it was  still being classified by many along with cults.  Now, being a Pentecostal is an  “in” thing amoung many Christians, and the stature, reputation and dignity of  the group continue to grow.  If the Lord tarries, pentecostalism will  undoubtedly go down in future history as the most significant religious  phenomenon of the twentieth century.
What is behind  this awesome growth?
First and  foremost, pentecostal growth, as all bona fide church growth, is a sovereign  work of God.  Paul said that although he plants and Apollos waters, it is God  who gives the increase (1 Cor 3:6).  Jesus said, “I will build by church”  (Matthew 16:18).  It is His church, and He is the builder.  To God and God alone  be the glory!
But the same  God is the underlying cause of Episcopal, Mennonite, Presbyterian, Lutheran, and  any other kind of church growth, as well as pentecostal growth.  Why is it,  then, that pentecostals seem to grow more vigorously?  The full answer to that  question is complex; but, for the purpose of this article, I am going to attempt  to simplify it by selecting as carefully as I can what I consider to be the four  most salient characteristics of pentecostal growth.  Not that other churches do  not also share some of these qualities - they do.  But none, it seems to me,  have combined all four quite as well as pentecostals have.  Pentecostals are  usually characterized by churches of purity, prayer, power and the poor.  Let me  develop each one of these.
Churches of Purity
                Pentecostal churches  have a tradition of purity in three key areas: belief in the Bible, Christian  doctrine, and lifestyle.
Belief in the Bible
                The authority of the  Scriptures is final.  Pentecostals believe that what the Bible says is the Word  of God, no questions asked.  The great theological debates of the last century  which have eroded confidence in the Bible amoung large segments of Christendom  have scarcely touched pentecostals.  If pentecostals have erred at all, they may  interpret the Bible too literally in places, but that is hardly a dangerous  error any more than having too many clothes on when you are caught in a mountain  snowstorm.  Too many clothes may be cumbersome, but too few could cost you your  life.
                Research in church  growth has shown that the more literally the Bible is interpreted, the more  likely the church is to grow.  One reason then, that pentecostal churches are  growing is that they hold to biblical purity.
Sound Doctrine
Sound doctrine,  which goes along with biblical authority, has also contributed to the purity of  pentecostal churches.  While it is true that pentecostals have differed amoung  themselves on secondary doctrines, they have agreed on the basics.
Christian Lifestyle
                Christian lifestyle is a  third mark of pentecostal purity.  For most pentecostals conversion is a  radical, life-changing experience.  Separation from the world is demanded at the  new birth.  No drinking, no-smoking, no drugs, no extramarital sex, no cussing,  and no gambling are common lifestyle characteristics amoung pentecostals.  Some  groups add others such as no dancing, no gold, no bikinis, no rock music, no  movies, no card playing, no sports, and no buying on Sunday.  On the positive  side, pentecostals usually go to church three or four times a week, read the  Bible daily, pray before each meal, and give at least ten percent of their  income to the Lord.
                It may seem to some that  such strictness could be an obstacle to church growth.  Just the opposite.  It  is a well-known fact that the stricter the religious obligations and the higher  the level of commitment demanded on its members, the more vigorously a church  grows.  Watering down the Christian lifestyle to conform to society in general  may appear to have some short-term benefits for growth, but over the long haul  it will surely turn people away from the church.  The pentecostal pendulum,  fortunately, is still over on the strict side.
Churches of Prayer
                This section on prayer  will be relatively short.  The shortness, however does not reflect the lack of  importance of prayer for the growth of the church.  It simply reflects the lack  of research.  I know that prayer is closely related to church growth, and I have  set as one of my research goals for the eighties an attempt to discover just how  and why this is true.
                However, even though I  do not know as much as I wish I knew about the subject, I do know that  pentecostals are praying people.  The kind of prayer that requires the active,  energetic participation of each person (as contrasted to liturgical prayers that  require very little personal involvement) is a universal characteristic of  pentecostal people in their churches, their family circles, and their private  devotions.  Praying in tongues undoubtedly helps this greatly.  It frequently  establishes an intimate contact with God that is otherwise much more difficult  to establish and maintain.  Through the years I have noticed that in  interdenominational meetings the person called upon to lead the group in prayer  is frequently the pentecostal.
                Intimacy with God is  reflected not only in formal prayers, but also in revelatory manifestations of  the Spirit such as prophecies, including what many call a word of knowledge  (which I consider a type of prophecy).  This kind of direct contact with the  Holy Ghost is a tremendous force for growth and is most consistently prominent  in pentecostal churches.
                If I may be permitted a  personal anecdote, some years ago I was helping our Congregational church  through the process of planting a new daughter church.  We retained a firm to do  a demographic study so that we would be sure we located the new church in the  right place.  As I recall, the service cost us about $ 7,000.  While we were  still in the process of this project, I was invited to dinner at a friend’s  house.  Pastor Jack Hayford of the Church of the Way in Van Nuys, the largest  church of the Foursquare Gospel in the country, was also a guest.  He mentioned  in passing that they were planting a new church in Valencia, and I asked him how  they went about selecting Valencia as the location.  “Oh,” he said, “I was  driving along the freeway by Magic Mountain when all of a sudden I got a warm  feeling in my chest, and the Lord said, “Plant a new church in Valencia.”   I  told him that it was much cheaper to be a Pentecostal than a Congregationalist!
Churches of Power
                 Closely related to the intimacy with God attained through  prayer is the frequent manifestation of supernatural signs and wonders in  Pentecostal churches.  Probably the greatest contribution that Pentecostalism  has made to Christianity in general is restoring the reality of the miracle  power of the New Testament.  Such power had been absent amoung the other  churches for so long that when it appeared in Pentecostalism around the turn of  the century the only way many traditional Christians could handle it was to  declare it a heresy and classify Pentecostals as a false cult.  Most Christians  are smarter now, and God has forgiven them for the past.
                Although I am still in  the process of studying this, it does seem to me that one of the major purposes,  if not the major one, of signs and wonders in the New Testament was to attract  the attention of unbelievers and to draw them to Jesus Christ and to the kingdom  of god.  Time after time in the book of Acts, signs and wonders are related to  vigorous church growth.  Acts 5:12-16 is typical of many other passages: “Many  miracles and wonders were being performed amoung the people by the apostles . .  . more and more people were added to the group - a crowd of men and women who  believed in the Lord.”
                Worldwide, Pentecostal  churches grow when the Holy Spirit is free to manifest His miracle power through  believers.  An amazing phenomenon of modern times is the explosive growth of  churches in Mainland China during the Mao era.  When the missionaries were  driven out in 1949 and 1950, an estimated one million Protestant Christians  remained in China.  Through 30 years of the harsh persecution, through the  brutality of the Cultural Revolution, with no Bibles, pastors, or church  buildings, the church did not wither away as many feared it would.  Instead it  grew vigorously so that estimates of believers in China now run from 25 million  to almost 50 million.  How did this happen?  All the answers are not yet in, but  one thing we know for sure is that a major factor was God’s immediate  supernatural work of healings, casting out of demons, and miracles.  While the  thousands of house-churches that have been springing up cannot be claimed for  Pentecostals or for any other denomination, my hunch is that most of them will  turn out to be more like Pentecostals than any other modern branch of  Christianity.
                Not only do Pentecostals  believe in miracle power, they also believe in soul-winning power. Sharing the  faith is a constant way of life for Pentecostals.  They believe that God wants  to use them to win souls, and He does.  When I consult with many denominations,  I have to start by convincing them that the gospel is worth sharing and that God  wants churches to grow.  Not so with Pentecostals.  It never occurred to them to  question it.  Pentecostals are possibility thinkers - their faith level is  high.  They believe in evangelism, and they believe in church growth.  They  trust God for great things and God honors their faith.  Pentecostal churches are  churches of power.
Churches of the Poor
                 The God of the Bible is a God who loves the poor.  It is true  that He loves all people, including the rich; but, if we take the Bible  seriously, we know that He has a special bias for the poor.  Because of this,  God is going to make sure that the poor have a strong witness for Christ.  Back  in the eighteenth century the Anglican Church in England had abandoned the poor,  so God raised up the Methodist Church.  When the Methodists came to America,  they ministered to the poor with circuit riders going from cabin to cabin out on  the frontier.  But one hundred years later, the Methodists had become  middle-class, and God raised up the Holiness / Pentecostal movement to minister  to the poor once again.
                Check it out.  Almost  all Pentecostal preachers now in their sixties or seventies were born in poor  homes, and many younger ones were also.  This is one of the strongest  characteristics of Pentecostal growth.  Research has shown that the working  class people of the world are more receptive to the gospel than the higher  classes.  Furthermore, God reserves a special blessing for His servants who  preach the good news to the poor, and Pentecostals have been receiving this  blessing through the years.
                But this observation  leads me to my final section in which I want to elaborate on what I said up  front; namely, that there are some ominous signs that Pentecostals may subtly be  moving away from the very things that have contributed to their growth for 80  years.  Many different factors are entering into this process, but most of them  can be classified under the following: the burning desire for  respectability.
Dangers of Respectability
                 I have argued that Pentecostal churches are growing steadily  and strongly because they are churches of purity, prayer, power and the poor.   If they remain that way, they will remain strong.  But cutting any of these  characteristics off will be like cutting off the hair of Samson.  Unfortunately,  I think Delilah with her scissors may be lurking right around the corner.
                Especially since World  War II ended, 35 years ago, Pentecostals have been gaining respectability  rapidly.  Being persecuted and classified with the Jehovah’s Witnesses now seems  like an unreal bad dream.  General superintendents and general overseers are now  officers in the National Association of Evangelicals.  They get invitations to  the large international congresses.  For the older generation it is a great  relief to be able to mix with other leaders inter-denominationally after taking  nothing but abuse for so many years.  The younger generation knows no different  - weren’t Pentecostals always respectable, just like Lutherans and  Presbyterians?
                All this is to the  good.  Behold how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in  unity.  But it has its problems - especially for church growth.  One price of  respectability is that you will continue to be accepted so long as you do not  stress your doctrinal distinctives.  For Pentecostals this means keeping a low  profile on Baptism in the Holy Spirit, the initial evidence of speaking in  tongues, hallelujahs and amens from the audience, miraculous healings and  exorcisms, prophecies / words of knowledge, and many more.  But these are some  of the very characteristics that have enabled Pentecostals to grow three or four  times faster than the other groups they are trying to gain respectability from.
                Behind all this is a  phenomenon called redemption and lift.  When poor people become Christians and  allow God to clean up their life, they frequently do not remain poor.  But, as  the Methodists learned, rising to middle-class respectability can easily get a  church out of touch with the poor they originally came from.  This hasn’t  completely happened to Pentecostals, but it has happened enough to hoist yellow  flags all over the place.  If the Pentecostals abandon the poor, God will raise  up someone else to minister to them and the rate of growth of Pentecostal  churches will surely begin to drop.
                One of the measuring  sticks for redemption and lift is the denominational educational system.  As  Pentecostals who were born poor rise socially and economically, they desire  better educational opportunities for their children than they themselves had -  so they establish colleges.  When their children graduate from college, they are  irretrievably middle-class.  Over the decades this can and usually does shift  the focus of outreach and church growth from the poor to the middle class.
                Another measuring stick  involves requirements for ministers.  Most of the old-time Pentecostal preachers  were either self-educated or they learned by being an apprentice to another  pastor.  Then, when the colleges came, more and more were college graduates.   Ministers were considered more respectable if they went to college.  Then the  process escalates until graduate schools are established.  Currently, the Church  of God, the Assemblies of God, and the Pentecostal Holiness Church are about at  this point.  Down the line a two-tiered ministry is likely to develop.  Those  who go to graduate school will subtly be thought of as superior to those who do  not, and they will be elected to influential denominational policy-making  positions.  It may take a few decades, but the well-meaning declarations of the  present leaders (who have not gone to graduate school) that no formal education  requirements will be made for ordination into the ministry may begin to erode  and eventually disappear altogether.  A study of the Methodist church will show  that it can happen.  It will be devastating for church growth if it does.
                By this time some are  saying, “Hey! Wagner has stopped preaching and gone to meddling.”  Well, then  let me conclude with a list of concrete suggestions that can keep Pentecostals  on track as the global leaders in making church growth happen:
1.       Hold purity high.  I do not see much change as yet in biblical authority  or doctrine, but I do detect some watering down of the Christian lifestyle as  distinctly separated from the world around.  Keep strict, and God will bless.
2.       Depend on prayer and fastings as your spiritual core. Keep channels open  for intimacy with God through tongues and prophecies.
3.       Ask God to show His power through signs and wonders as He did in the  early days of the Pentecostal movement.  Publicize testimonies of those who have  been blessed through miracles.  Not enough is said about healing any more.  If I  am not mistaken, only one author, David L. Lemons, addressed the issue of  healing in the entire first year of publication of the Pentecostal Minister.
4.       Maintain a passion for souls. Keep witnessing and outreach in the  forefront of all church programs.
5.       Never allow educational requirements to substitute for spiritual gifts as  the basis for ordaining new ministers.
6.       Vigorously plant new churches and exalt the bivocational minister.   There’s nothing wrong with earning money from a secular job while you’re  building a new church.
7.       Curse  “the demon of respectability.” Be willing to be fools for Christ’s  sake.  Do not allow association with other Christians to water down Pentecostal  distinctive of doctrine or practice.
The last two  decades of the twentieth century hold incredible promise.  I believe that they  will see the greatest harvest of souls in the history of the Christian Church.   My prayer is that, as Pentecostals have led the way in reaping the harvest over  the past two decades, they will maintain this leadership with even greater power  as we move into the future for the glory of God.
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    A Father of Canadian Pentecostalism 
    Robert McAlister 
1880 -     1953 
     “Lifelong     desire to bring people into a personal relationship with Christ” | 
by James  Craig   (PAOC  Missions research and communications)
             Robert  Edward McAlister played a foundational role in the early growth of the  Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada (PAOC), the nation’s largest Pentecostal  denomination.  His labours as an evangelist, pastor, organizer, teacher, writer,  and missions promoter helped the PAOC grow from twenty-seven churches in 1910 to  over one thousand today in the 90’s.
            McAlister was born in the Ottawa  Valley, near Cobden, Ontario, one of thirteen children born to James and  Margaret McAlister, who were Presbyterians of Scottish descent.  Robert left  school after the third grade to help on the family farm.  Aided by a  photographic memory, he educated himself, so well that he later became renowned  for extensive doctrinal writings. He would strap his Bible to the plough and  memorize long passages while he worked the fields.  In later years, he became  known as the Walking Bible, often reciting lengthy passages of Scripture as he  preached.
            In the late 1880’s, the Ottawa Valley  came under the influence of Ralph C. Horner, a fiery Methodist evangelist.   Horner’s brand of holiness religion was welcomed by the Methodist church in  Cobden, and when he was expelled from the denomination in 1895 that church  became a branch of his Holiness Movement Church.  It was in that church that  McAlister converted to Christ around 1900.  Sensing a call to the ministry in  1901, he entered God’s Bible School, a small Holiness college in Cincinnati.   Poor health during his second year of studies forced his return home.  After his  recovery he began preaching for the Holiness Movement Church instead of  returning to school.
            In 1906, McAlister learned of the  events taking place at a small mission on Azusa Street in Los Angeles.  People  were experiencing spiritual phenomena similar to those on the day of Pentecost  as recorded in the second chapter of Acts.  They were speaking in unknown  languages and witnessing miracles of healing.  McAlister traveled by train to  Los Angeles and went to the warehouse where the continuous services were in  progress.  He experienced what Pentecostals call the Baptism with the Holy  Spirit, the hallmark of the Pentecostal movement.  This definitive receiving and  releasing of the power of the Holy Spirit includes speaking in tongues and  imparts a dynamic ability and fervent desire to share the gospel with others.   McAlister was amoung the first Canadians to receive the Pentecostal experience.   The remainder of his life provided ample demonstration of the effects of his  encounter with the Holy Spirit at Azusa Street.  He passionately devoted his  energies to bringing people into a joyous personal relationship with Jesus  Christ.
            Back in Canada, McAlister shared his  new blessing.  From his base in the Ottawa Valley, he traveled extensively in  the United States and Canada, holding evangelistic meetings and teaching at  Pentecostal conventions.  Soon, churches were established in Ottawa and a number  of other communities.
            In 1911, McAlister began his career as  a religious writer and publisher.  He started a small paper, the Good Report,  that contained accounts of Pentecostal conventions, testimonies of physical  healings, conversion stories, and articles on the teachings of the Pentecostal  movement.  In the first issue, McAlister articulated the central characteristics  of the movement.  He stated that the Pentecostal movement was a restoration of  the teachings and practices of the New Testament Apostles and was a “soul-saving  agency in the hands of God.”  McAlister further claimed that it was a missionary  movement intent on evangelizing the world, with no human founder, and completely  centered upon Jesus Christ.
            By 1917, the need for a formal  structure to unite Pentecostal churches across Canada had become evident.   Discussions among key leaders led to McAlister and six other ministers being  granted a federal charter incorporating the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada in  1919.  McAlister’s prominent role in forming the new organization is reflected  in his serving as its first general secretary (1919 - 1932), and, at the same  time, as its first missions secretary and in the dozens of resolutions that bear  his name in the organization’s official minutes.  All of this was in addition to  his pastoral duties.
            In 1920, McAlister also founder the  Pentecostal Testimony, a publication that still serves as the official organ  of the PAOC.  During his fifteen years as its editor, McAlister wrote  expositions of Christian doctrine, warned of the dangers that threatened the  fledgling movement, and promoted the cause of missions.
            Two years later, he accepted an  invitation to become the pastor of a thriving Pentecostal assembly in London,  Ontario.  Within three years, a larger church was built only to be expanded two  years later.
            McAlister was a caring shepherd and  powerful Bible teacher.  He demonstrated his emphasis on evangelism by beginning  a daily radio broadcast in 1934 that aired for fifteen years.  His program was  instrumental in starting new churches in several Ontario towns, including  Chatham, Blenheim, Dresden, and Ridgetown.  Under McAlister’s teaching and with  his personal encouragement, dozens of young men and women entered the ministry  as evangelists, pastors, and missionaries, influencing communities worldwide.
            In October 1940, after nineteen years  of fruitful ministry in London, McAlister resigned his pastorate and moved to  Toronto.  His remaining years were spent in itinerant teaching and preaching,  including an extensive campaign from 1948 to 1952 to combat doctrinal  controversies that threatened to divide the PAOC.  This latter role further  enhanced his reputation as a Pentecostal theologian.
            McAlister’s lifelong desire was to  bring people into a personal relationship with Christ.  His nephew Eric McLean  recalls that while visiting McAlister, who had been admitted to hospital with  heart problems in late September 1953, he learned his uncle had just shared the  gospel with his roommate, leading the man to Christ.  By the time Eric returned  home from the hospital, McAlister had died.
            The Pentecostal movement in Canada is  the work of many dedicated pioneers, such as Andrew H. Argue, George A.  Chambers, and Alfred G. Ward.  But no one is better qualified to be called the  father of Canadian Pentecostalism than Robert Edward McAlister.
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         [1] A mid 80’s study     of the growth of USA denominational families has shown that Pentecostal     churches are growing at a DGR (Decadal growth rate) of 48%, far ahead of all     others. The Seventh-Day Adventists are second at 26%, then Southern Baptists     at 17%, and Lutherans at minus 5%.
         [2] L. Grant McClung,     Jr. wrote “Azusa Street and Beyond” in 1986 which gives an excellent     account of the beginnings of the Pentecostal church in North America.
         [3] Joel 2:28-32  “And     afterward, I will pour out my Spirit on all people.  Your sons and daughters     will prophesy, your old men will dream dreams, your young men will see     visions.  Even on my servants, both men and women, I will pour out my Spirit     in those days.  I will show wonders in the heavens and on the earth, blood     and fire and billows of smoke.  The sun will be turned to darkness and the     moon to blood before the coming of the great and dreadful day of the LORD.      And everyone who calls on the name of the LORD will be saved; for on Mount     Zion and in Jerusalem there will be deliverance, as the LORD has said,     amoung the survivors whom the LORD calls.”
         [4] Pentecostalism     cannot be understood without a “visit” to Azusa Street, scene of the     widespread beginning of the Pentecostal Movement.  Thankfully, a return to     Azusa Street is made possible because of the foresight of early Pentecostals     who published and preserved for history The Apostolic Faith magazine.     This report is the lead article from the very first issue of the Azusa     Street paper, dated September, 1906.  It is taken from Like as of Fire: A     Reprint of the Old Azusa Street Papers, privately compiled by Fred Corum in     1981 (160 Salem Street, Wilmington, MA 01887)
Apostolic Faith     was published from the Azusa Street Mission by William J. Seymour and     Florence Louise Crawford.  Five thousand copies of the first issue were     distributed.  Only thirteen issues were published from Los Angeles before     Crawford moved to Portland, Oregon, to establish with the Apostolic Faith     movement in the Northwest USA.  The last issue was dated May, 1908.
         [5] C. Peter Wagner     wrote this article and it was published in The Pentecostal Minister.  He is     a professor at Fuller Theological Seminary School of World Mission.  He was     a missionary to Bolivia for 16 years, and is an expert on church growth.      The above are a few exerpts from his article.
 
 
 
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