Paul
N. F. (5 June 2012)
"ALL 52 CAME HOME -
BECAUSE
OF THE PRAYERS"
- True
Stories
From "The 700 Club"
- ALL
52
CAME HOME - BECAUSE OF THE PRAYERS
-
- Across the
United States, memorials honor the men and women who
served their
country in the Second World war. But the memorial in the
little gulf
coast town of Seadrift, Texas, is different. It is a
testimony to the
courage of the soldiers and sailors from Seadrift - and,
in a way, it
is a testimony to the miracle-working power of God.
- In 1942,
the
pastor of the First Assembly of God, Robert Caddell,
wanted something
tangible to remind the church to pray for the church's men
in uniform.
So he encouraged members to bring in pictures of their
loved ones in
the military.
- Soon, 52
pictures of soldiers and sailors were collected and Pastor
Caddell
framed them in a collage.
- Members of
the
church began meeting to pray for the men in the collage.
Lora Weaver,
who was in her 20s at the time, remembered, "We all began
to get a
burden for those boys - began to meet and pray, seek
God for their
safety."
- Mary Wilson
Neill, who was a young girl with several brothers
overseas, said, "I
can never remember a night that I went to bed that I
didn't remember to
pray for the men. ... And we never had a service in the
church that
they weren't mentioned, in prayer.
- The church
prayed for the Gaines brothers -- Lonnie and
Ora, whose
young faces smiled out from the prayer collage. Before
Lonnie left for
the war, Pastor Caddell had made him a special promise.
- "Brother
Caddell ... took my hand," Lonnie remembered, "and prayed
and said:
`Brother Lonnie,' he said, `You're going to come back. ...
I'm going to
be on my knees day after day and night after night ... and
people are
going to be praying for you to see you through this
thing."
- As far as
Lonnie is concerned, prayer did see him through. "We never
lost a man
off our ship," he said, "but we came close to it."
Lonnie's ship had
one of the most heart rending jobs in the South Pacific -
searching for
survivors of ships sunk in battle. "A lot of the boys lost
their lives
that we picked up," Lonnie remembers. "We picked them up,
and some we'd
have to take ... up on the mountain in Okinawa and bury
them. ... But I
thank God for saving my life."
-
While
Lonnie was in the South Pacific, his brother Ora was on a
tug
boat off the coast of Alaska. Pastor Caddell and the
Seadrift
intercessors were praying for Ora the day that his
"big tow boat
went down and sank."
- Ora
remembers
that his boat "went down pretty fast. But we all managed
to get off.
God [was] taking care of us. If He [hadn't], there
wouldn't have been
any other way we could've gotten off."
- Back in
Seadrift, people kept praying, although times were hard
for many of the
wives and mothers left behind. "I know one of our little
ladies," Lora
Weaver recalls, "she'd come and pray then she'd leave
because she was
taking in ironing and washing to help make a living."
- Gerald
McGowen
was an airman flying supply missions with the Army Air
Corps. Like
other men in the Seadrift collage, Gerald is
convinced that prayer
saved his life. Gerald and his buddies were on a training
mission,
pushing mock supply bundles out of the plane's cargo bay.
They had just
kicked a bundle out when its parachute opened too soon and
became
tangled in the plane's tail assembly. They started losing
altitude fast.
- "I was
stranded on the right side of the open doorway," Gerald
remembered,
"and I hit the ceiling when the plane started bouncing. I
kept reaching
for a hand-hold ... because I knew I could tumble out. ...
All of that
time, I was bouncing up and down ... I believe
there was a
hand-hold that I got that I didn't realize then, and that
was the
hand-hold of Jesus Christ."
- Of the 52
men
in the Seadrift collage, every one came home from World
War II alive.
- Today
Timothy
Smith pastors Seadrift's First Assembly of God, where the
collage still
hangs in a place of honor.
- "I am
pastoring those people who prayed during the war," Pastor
Smith said,
"[and] their children and their grandchildren. The
heritage and legacy
of their faith has been passed on from the parents to the
children and
from their children on down to the grandchildren. And it
shows."
- The legacy
continues. Each and every person from the First Assembly
of God that
served in Korea and Vietnam also returned home safely -
thanks to the
prayers of the church and the faithfulness of the Lord.
- When people
comment on the miracle of the Seadrift collage, Pastor
Smith refers
them to the miracles of protection God did for the
children of Israel.
-
He
says it's the same today as it was then: "Every time
mighty things
happened, it was because people were praying."
- Yours in
Christ,
- Paul N. F