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OILFIELD CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP BLOG #11


On Tuesday March 15, 2022 I had the opportunity to share my testimony with this group at a luncheon meeting at the Fort Worth Petroleum Club. When I agreed to do this, I was thinking of ‘PR’ for the Seminary, but the OCF leader said that generally a speaker might be expected to give his own spiritual testimony. I was able to accomplish both by relating instances of the Holy Spirit’s guidance in my life, leading up to my election to the Seminary board of trustees.


Background: Oilfield Christian Fellowship was founded in 1991 as an outlet for Christians in the oilfields to meet each other. OCF has evolved into other forms of outreach including a Bible ministry, prayer breakfasts, Bible studies and more. There are chapters in Louisiana, Pennsylvania, Oklahoma and eight in Texas; as well as Canada and Venezuela.


Field work in the oil industry is very labor intensive. I don’t pretend to think that profanity is class-conscious – perhaps rough-hewn guys in the trenches just express themselves more colorfully. Nonetheless, OCF serves a very real purpose in the oil patch.


THE HOLY SPIRIT AT WORK


We Christians know that the Holy Spirit comes to indwell us when we accept Christ as our Savior. Nonetheless as humans we often rely on our own thoughts, analyses and decisions without inquiring of the Lord’s will, but sometimes His taking control of a situation is just plainly obvious. (Is that a redundancy – plainly obvious?) I relate the following instances of His work made obvious to me, in my life.


In my early teens I came within inches of a speeding car hitting me on my bicycle on a busy street. I was not a Christian at the time but I came to realize, that was so close it was a miracle I was not hit. My parents were sitting out on the front porch that evening and witnessed the event: I still have the mental picture of my Dad’s consternation giving way to relief.


Long term effects: I’m still here – God is not yet finished with me!


I returned to college at Tech in 1956 after my two-year Army ‘career.’ In September a church near campus hosted a ‘back to school’ ice cream social at which I met a young lady. Wanda was a very committed, very dedicated Christian girl. We courted several months, got engaged and planned to marry on Easter weekend in 1957 (Spring of my Junior year). As the time drew near we realized we were not ready, and moved the date to September as I would be entering my Senior and final year at Tech.


On that Easter Sunday 1957 the Holy Spirit made two big moves: God called me to salvation; and Wanda was protected from being unequally ‘yoked’.


Long term effect: Fifty-two years of faithful marriage and two very talented daughters.


In the intervening years there were plenty of opportunities to experience leading, or guiding, or protection of the Holy Spirit in our family. The next ‘really big one’ occurred in spring or summer 1985. By this time our two daughters were in their early 20s.


We were great fans of Marlin Maddoux who hosted a talk show on Christian radio; Point of View. At our family dinner one evening our daughter said, “Dad, everyone is talking about abortion. Why can’t we do something about it?” (At the time Roe v Wade had been in effect approximately 12 years.)


Thanks to Mr. Maddoux preaching what the Holy Spirit laid on his heart and in turn prompting us the listeners, the Pregnancy Help Center of Fort Worth came into being. As of 2020 our staff and volunteers have accounted for over 11,000 babies borne that might otherwise have been aborted.


Long term effect: Through the counsel of our volunteers babies continue to be saved from abortion and mothers-to-be saved to eternity.


Another instance that has had a lasting influence in my life occurred in June 1989. I was still working fulltime in the oil industry, officing downtown. I generally ate lunch at the Petroleum Club and was pretty well known among the regulars. It was election time for three new board members at the club and a list of five nominees was put up, with instruction to vote for three; the three receiving the most votes would be elected. I was number four, just two votes behind number three!


But the Lord had greater things in store for me! An attorney friend submitted my name to the Southern Baptist Convention as a nominee to the Board of Trustees at Southwestern Baptist Seminary! How much more special – Porterhouse steak instead of a hot dog!! Following only God and family, this has been one of the most ongoing, fulfilling chapters in my life. I was on the Board from 1989 to 1998 and served two years as Vice Chair and two years as Chair. Since completing my term on the Board I have remained active at the Seminary, being a member of the Southwestern Advisory Council and a Life member of the President’s Club. Now, following all that, they let me be a (volunteer) staff member!


Long term effect: A continuing association in preparing future Christian ministry partners with a Biblical education.


Lee Weaver

March 2022

 
 
 
  • Writer: Lee Weaver
    Lee Weaver
  • Jan 1, 2022
  • 6 min read

Updated: Oct 27, 2023

MIGRATIONS Lee’s Blog #10


I got the inspiration for this blog when I was doing ‘Famous Love Stories from Literature’ for my Valentine blog. A particular story, “Evangeline,” (described below) prompted further study of migrations, many (most?) of which might be called “forced relocations;” but I also note that not all migrations were forced by superior powers, some were the result of environmental and/or economic conditions. I don’t pretend this to be an exhaustive study of such events from time beginning nor worldwide; in fact many took place on American soil.


EARLY HISTORY – OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE TIMES; ISRAEL’S CAPTIVITY IN EGYPT AND BABYLONIA.


The stories of Israel’s times of captivity should be considered from a Biblical perspective and seen through that lens. These are histories of a chosen people who rebelled and were brought back to God’s covenant. These are only mentioned here as being representative of the seemingly-eternal existence of migrations, including ‘forced relocations’ of enslaved persons. For further study of the Israelite nation read your Bible!


AFRICAN SLAVES 1526


In recent times no study of this subject could pretend to be serious if not started with the “forced relocation” of 12.5 million Africans, born free but forced into 600 years of slavery. Beginning late 15th century Portugal had gained mastery of the seas and reached into Africa and beyond, and reportedly began the acquisition of natives who were put into slavery. It is thought that Christopher Columbus brought such persons with him to America although it is not known if they were actually slaves.


It is reported that between 1525 and 1866 12,500,000 African natives were taken, intended for slavery; but almost 2,000,000 did not survive the horrid conditions shipboard. (Surprisingly, at least to this writer, of the 10.7 million who survived the ‘middle passage,’ only about 338,000 were brought directly to North America.) Brazil and the Caribbean islands were by far the greater importers of slaves.


(Data derived from PBS.org and from Henry Louis Gates, Jr “The Root.” Also see Michael Guasco’s “Slaves and Englishmen: Human Bondage in the Early Modern Atlantic World,” University of Pennsylvania Press January 11, 2014; and David Eltis’s “The Rise of African Slavery in the Americas,” Cambridge University Press 2000. These sources raise questions concerning the ‘woke’ liberals dating slavery in America from the 1619 Jamestown slave ship disembarkation.)


LE GRANDE DERANGEMENT (Fr.; In English The ‘Great Upheaval’ or ‘Deportation’) 1755

French Acadiens (‘Acadians’ in English) were forcibly removed from Acadie (Acadia) in Nova Scotia for their refusal to swear allegiance to the English king. Most were sent to Louisiana, ca 1755. The Henry Wadsworth Longfellow epic poem “Evangeline” relates the story. (The word ‘Acadian’ has been so slurred in speech to become what we call today ‘Cajun.’)


In Nova Scotia, Evangeline was betrothed to Gabriel at the time of the deportation. Evangeline and Gabriel were put on separate ships whose journeys debarked at different locales. Evangeline (who landed in Louisiana) set out to find Gabriel, and they were reunited decades later: she was working as a nurse with Sisters of Mercy in Philadelphia and found Gabriel in the hospital, dying. He died in her arms.


TRAIL OF TEARS 1830


Under the “Indian Removal Act” of 1830, 60,000 Native Americans of the “Five Civilized Tribes” were forcibly removed from the Southeastern US, principally Florida, and resettled on reservations in Oklahoma.


The five tribes include the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek and Seminoles. They were described as ‘civilized’ because of their early adoption of many of the white man’s ways.


THE LONG WALK


Principally Navajo but also Mescalero Apache Indians were forcibly removed by the US Army from the Mesa Verde area in NE Arizona and NW New Mexico to the Bosque Redondo reservation near Fort Sumner, along the Pecos River in eastern New Mexico. Of the 10,000 Indians force-marched 300+ miles, over 200 died of starvation and exposure along the way. Another 2400 +/- died at the reservation from pneumonia, dysentery and small pox.


Under a new treaty in June 1868 the remaining members of the tribes were allowed to a greatly-reduced portion of their homelands, and began the long trek home.


THE NEZ PERCE INDIAN TRIBE 1877


The Nez Perce traditional homelands were in the Wallowa Valley of Idaho and Oregon. As is the usual history of US Indian policy US made and broke treaties in 1855 and 1863; in 1877 President Grant opened the valley to white settlement, and the Nez Perce were given 30 days in which to move to the Lapwai Reservation. The tribe tried to remove themselves to Canada and in a succession of shrewd military actions outmaneuvered ten pursuing units of the US Army until the outnumbered tribe, sick, starving and tired, finally surrendered after a 1,700 mile 108 day fighting retreat. On October 8, 1877 Chief Joseph made his noble speech, “from where the sun now stands, I will fight no more forever.”


THE HOLOCAUST


Krystallnacht Nov 9-10, 1938. 200 +/- synagogues destroyed, 8000+ Jewish shops sacked and looted, tens of thousands Jews removed to concentration camps. Thus began the implementation of Hitler’s “final solution” – his genocidal intent to utterly and completely annihilate the Jewish race.

The Holocaust is inarguably one of the most destructive and murderous events in the history of civilization. (1) The single most stupefying event during the Holocaust was Operation Reinhard (1942-1943), the largest single murder campaign of the Holocaust during which some 1.7 million Jews from German-occupied Poland were murdered by the Nazis. One study identifies this extreme phase of


hyperintense killing when >25% 0f the Jews killed in all six years of WW II were murdered by the Nazis in an intense 100-day surge.


Does history repeat itself? Despite the horror witnessed by the entire world, over the last 70 years genocides and mass killing events have continued to occur and they are not diminishing in frequency: consider Bosnia, Rwanda, Darfur, Burundi, Syria, Myanmar.


SUDETENLAND 1938-39


The German expulsion from the Sudetenland. See WW I, Sudetenland taken from Germany and given to Czechoslovakia. The Munich pact 1938 responded to Hitler’s demands


CONTEMPORARY AMERICA


DUST BOWL DAYS – THE AMERICAN SOUTHERN PLAINS (1930s) (Handy Dust Bowl facts from KinseyLibrary.info)


What came to be called the “dust bowl” covered 100 square miles in Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas. Meteorologists call it the #1 weather event of the 20th century.


Factors:

exacerbated the coming economic collapse. A new immigration law in 1929 one of every two immigrants back to Mexico.


1930 The first really bad rolling dust storm was driven by 60 mph winds, following months of worsening droughts.


1932 Fourteen bad storms occurred this year; the Weather Bureau began calling them ‘dust storms.’

1932 One of every four workers were jobless.


1933 Thirty-nine dust storms. 90% of the chickens in one Texas panhandle county died from the effects of dust in the atmosphere.


1934 On May 11, a massive dust storm two miles high traveled 2000 mile to the East Coast, blotting out monuments such as the Statue of Liberty and the U S Capitol. In the dust bowl locale, there were 40 days of temperatures over 100 degrees, the high was 118.


1935 The worst dust storm occurred on April 14, 1935. News reports dubbed this date ‘Black Sunday.’ A wall of blowing sand and dust started in the Oklahoma panhandle and spread eastward. It is estimated that as much as three million tons of topsoil were blown off the Great Plains on this one day. (It has been estimated 850,000,000 tons of topsoil blew away over the southern and great plains by 1939 when regular rainfall returned to the region.)


What did this have to do with ‘Migrations?’


Following the Civil War a series of federal land acts coaxed pioneers westward by incentivizing farming in the Great Plains. The Homestead Act of 1862 provided settlers with 160 acres of public land; followed by the Kinkaid Act of 1904 and the Enlarged Homestead Act of 1909. These acts led to a massive influx of new and inexperienced farmers across the Great Plains.


Regrettably this migration to the Plains took another turn following the “Dust Bowl Days.” With the topsoil blown away and in drought conditions the farmers’ livelihood was irreparably lost.


In the second half of the 30’s decade roughly 2.5 million people left the Dust Bowl states – Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado, New Mexico and Texas. This became one of the largest migrations in American history.


JAPANESE AMERICANS WEST COAST 1941ff


The West Coast of the US, particularly California, has long experienced significant populations of Oriental emigrants; many became naturalized citizens. After Japanese forces attacked US-held Pearl Harbor in Hawaii on December 7, 1941; Americans gave in to fears that the Japanese residents in California might well include some whose loyalty remained in the Land of the Rising Sun.


Under FDR’s Executive Order 9066, starting in February 1942 some 120,000 people of Japanese ancestry, most of whom lived on the Pacific Coast were forcibly relocated and incarcerated in concentration camps in the interior of western states. Approximately two-thirds of the internees were United States citizens. Internment continued to November 1945.


(PARENTHETIC COMMENTS): Is it not strange that a nation which has produced such men as George Washington, Patrick Henry, Paul Revere, Teddy Roosevelt, Lewis and Clark, John Chisum, Neil Armstrong; also can be so fearful? This abject fear of the Japanese-American people in 1942, and the fear of Fauci in 2021, diminishes the stature of the American nation and her people!


My editor opines that the two fears, fear of possible foreign agents and fear of Fauci, present a non sequitur. My intent in stating the two together is to point out the irrationality of fear in the American psyche. My ‘fear of Fauci’ is an euphemism for fear of vaccines, which seems irrational when one remembers that Small pox and polio were virtually wiped out by vaccinations, and noting that all fifty states presently require certain vaccinations for public school attendance.


Copyright © 2022 Lee Weaver

 
 
 
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