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Tuesday, 30 December 2008

A tribute to Edie Iverson (1931 - 2008)

by Steven Ganz

I first met Edie Iverson in 1972 at a church called Bible Temple in Portland, Oregon. Although her husband pastored the 500-member church, her influence was unmistakeable and everywhere.

Sister Edie, as she was known, would lead worship with enthusiasm. She was not a good singer, but
Edie Iverson
her love of Jesus was so obvious that we in the congregation could care less and followed her as she led us in honoring God with all our hearts.

In all the years I knew her, I never once heard her complain or say something unkind about anyone. Although she suffered from rheumatoid arthritis, she never made it an issue.

Her mother, Sister Swanson, was a Scandinavian woman with a true gift of faith, who never made any allowance for doubt. Edie was out of the same mold, but had learned to be compassionate towards those of us who wrestled with doubt. Edie, if I remember correctly, was going to the Bible School in North Battleford, Saskatchewan, Canada when the Latter Rain Revival started. Through this revival she became involved in the prophetic and in the 'song of the Lord' as it was then called.

She and her husband, K. R. 'Dick' Iverson, were a doctrinally-balanced eye in the midst of that prophetic storm. Sister Edie could always be counted on to see the issues from the position of faith informed by love. Her passion and zeal for the Lord never waned. They led Bible Temple for 44 years, from a church of just a few families (known at first as Deliverance Temple), through several building projects, until it became a church of several thousand. Though the church became so large, she was always a mother to each of us. Even after the Lord had led my wife and I to go to other places, Sister Edie would always remember us and our kids.
Steve and Malana Ganz

I will remember her until 'that day.'

[Steve and Malana Ganz have served as missionaries in places like Panama and Kamchatka, Russia. Currently, Steve is the pastor of Clover Pass Community Church in Ketchikan, Alaska.]




Monday, 29 December 2008

Thomas Wyatt's multi-faceted ministry

Thomas Wyatt
In his book, All Things Are Possible: the Healing and Charismatic Revivals in Modern America, David Harrell Jr. wrote that in 1948 Thomas Wyatt "predicted the coming of a great revival."

No small thing that prediction, because Wyatt was, of course, aware that there was already revival underway in America. The healing revival, seen in the ministries of William Branham and others, was already making a significant impact.

But, Wyatt was correct, another revival - that would run parallel to the healing revival - was about to make its own impact. In February of 1948, the initial explosion and refreshing from that revival happened in North Battleford, Saskatchewan. Next was Edmonton in October, then Vancouver in November. Pastor Myrtle Beall was in the meetings in Vancouver, and when she returned to her church in Detroit, the revival detonated there in December.

The church Wyatt pastored in Portland, Oregon - Wings of Healing Temple - would also experience the refreshing of the Latter Rain Revival (as it came to be known) when the leadership from North Battleford ministered there in 1949.

George Hawtin
"When [George Hawtin and others from North Battleford] arrived on February twenty four, they found awaiting them some ninety ministers, who had come from Montana, Iowa, Kansas, Texas, California, Utah, Idaho, Colorado, Washington, and Canada," Bill Faupel writes. "They had planned to stay four days but found themselves still there three weeks later. Wyatt had a radio program that went out on a network of 64 stations. From that vantage point, word of the revival began to saturate the country" (from D. William Faupel's dissertation, The Everlasting Gospel: The Significance of Eschatology in the Development of Pentecostal Thought, 1989).

Wyatt (1891 - 1964) served the Church in many capacities in the course of his decades-long ministry - radio broadcaster, pastor, evangelist, head of a Bible institute, and international missionary. The radio broadcast, like his church, was called Wings of Healing and it grew to the point that he was able to get on the Mutual Radio Network in 1953, which gave him coast-to-coast coverage of the nation.

The Voice of Healing website says, "Thomas Wyatt may well be regarded as the unsung hero of the healing movement as he remains to this day one of the least known and least documented healing evangelists.

"In truth his ministry preceded all of the major healing ministries and outlasted all but a few. He received the baptism in the Holy Spirit in the 1930s and immediately launched a ministry of pioneer evangelism."

The March 1948 issue of The Foursquare Magazine gave this report concerning recent events at the Stockton (California) Foursquare Church, "Following the dedication services of December 18 a week revival with Dr. Thomas Wyatt of Portland, Oregon was launched. Miracles of apostolic days were the order of the week. Among the scores of miraculous healings which God performed was the instantaneous healing of a Stockton man who had not walked for two years. The man - a Roman Catholic - had spent $20,000 in the last two years to hospitals and doctors. He was carried into the building and when prayed for immediately stood up and walked. Well known in the city[,] the miracle is a tremendous testimony to the healing power of God. Two girls who were deaf and dumb were delivered and many other wonderful healings of internal diseases were manifested. A real revival spirit is sweeping the church and greater are anticipated in the future."

Hugh and Audrey Layzell, in their book, Sons of His Purpose, add, "He was known as an Apostle of Faith, and his message of faith and healing stirred everyone's faith for the signs, which Jesus promised would follow the preaching of the gospel."

Despite that emphasis in his ministry, when Wyatt experienced the Latter Rain Revival he decided to join forces with M. D. Beall, Stanley Frodsham, Fred Poole, and others who had experienced the revival (see the list of contributing editors to the Latter Rain Evangel, displayed on the right).

Faupel points out that Wyatt was asked to give the concluding message in 1950 at the first national Latter Rain convention in St. Louis.

"He disclosed that God had revealed to him it was His desire to bring this Latter Rain outpouring, not only to the North American continent, but to the ends of the earth. Wyatt's message deeply stirred the audience. By the end of the convention, teams of the revival's leaders made plans for missionary crusades to the Holy Land, India, Japan, and Latin America" (from Faupel's dissertation).

Paul Cannon, who graduated from Wyatt's Bethesda Bible Institute in 1953, went on to minister in Ghana and Nigeria. He says this about Wyatt's mission strategy in Africa,

"Dr. Wyatt's vision was to send out 'Invasion Teams' to be as shock troops, demonstrating the power of the gospel with signs, wonders, and miracles. This was to form a beachhead and get the attention of the nation. We would war a war of amazing kindness, demonstrating our love and concern for each member of the body of Christ.This would be done by sending out people two by two just as the Lord Jesus did in the Bible. To start, each team would be made up of one young minister and one older and seasoned minister with a proven record for a while then the young ones were to be put together to carry it on a month later. We believed that this is what the Apostle Paul did" (Paul Cannon in To Redeem a Land: the Story of How the Gospel Came to West Africa).

It's all well and good, of course, to adhere to scriptures and to have strategies. But, in the end, we must consider outcomes. In Thomas Wyatt's case, there were, praise the Lord, great outcomes.

Fred Poole, who pastored a church in Philadelphia, traveled with Wyatt to Nigeria in 1953 and the following is part of the account he wrote,

"On Monday morning we left for Lagos, Nigeria. We drove into the city of Accra, from which point we took our plane for Lagos. We were hailed with a great shout of praise. There were some of the African Pastors who had seen our car and they began to shout and praise God at the top of their voices...The day before, that was just a week after we had left Accra, God had moved as these Africans took up the message of deliverance, and they said that 250 people had been saved in the Sunday morning service, and on the same night there were 30 cases of definite miracles that were reported by the newspapers. Oh how we praised God. The revival still goes on.

"When we arrived in Lagos, we were met by a grand company of missionaries and African pastors and workers. Their expectation was high and they believed God for a mighty visitation. We only had one night there and both Dr. Wyatt and I were almost too tired to do anything. However, we both ministered and then as Dr. Wyatt prayed the prayer of faith, a young Mohammedan man, who had been injured falling from a high building three years previously, was instantly healed. His testimony was that he had been under the care of many specialists in the hospitals but they had failed to help him. They had sent him out eventually with braces around him and he walked with the aid of crutches. Never in all my life have I witnessed anything like it. The young man had never been in a Protestant meeting in his life. He had never seen anyone shaken by the power of God; but as he received the word of faith, he was made to stand on his feet. The Holy Spirit literally shook him from head to foot. He trembled all over; then with a look of amazement and wonder, he started to walk and shout and jump. He took off his braces and began to bend over and touch his toes, shouting and praising God. He was also saved and filled with the Holy Spirit" (Fred Poole in "Signs and Wonders" in Latter Rain Evangel, Volume 2, Number 7, May 1953).

Max Wyatt
His son, Max Wyatt, was also a pastor and missionary.

"Max was a teacher in the Bethesda Bible Institute [in Portland]; an auxiliary speaker on the Wings of Healing broadcast and was the founder and pastor of Faith Tabernacle in Salem, Oregon," Paul Cannon wrote. "He was one of the finest preachers that I have ever known and a tremendous man of God with a marvelous prophetic mantle. He was easy to get along with and found great joy in seeing young ministers excel" (Cannon in To Redeem a Land).

In 1956, Max took over his father's pastorate at Wings of Healing Temple in Portland.

Thomas Wyatt died April 19, 1964 at the age of 72. His grandson, Thomas R. Wyatt, has a ministry of his own called Wings of Healing.

Wyatt begins radio program .. former farmer (April 12, 1942)Wyatt begins radio program .. former farmer (April 12, 1942) Tue, Apr 14, 1942 – 4 · Greater Oregon (Albany, Oregon) · Newspapers.com 1952 - Wyatt, Grubb, Frodsham1952 - Wyatt, Grubb, Frodsham · Sat, Aug 30, 1952 – Page 4 · The Philadelphia Inquirer (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) · Newspapers.com Thomas Wyatt to LA, Max stays in Portland (Nov 1959)Thomas Wyatt to LA, Max stays in Portland (Nov 1959) Sun, Nov 15, 1959 – 48 · The Los Angeles Times (Los Angeles, California) · Newspapers.com

Sunday, 28 December 2008

Charlotte Baker's prophetic parables

I once sat in the balcony of the Bethesda Missionary Temple in Detroit as a guest speaker from
Charlotte Baker
Seattle, Washington told us that the word she had to share would put a spring in our step.

Well, let's see, I thought.

Forty-five minutes later, the guest speaker - Charlotte Baker - was proven right. I was eager to stand to my feet and worship the Lord in response to her message based on II Corinthians 5:17, "Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, the new creation has come: the old has gone, the new is here!"

Charlotte, the pastor of King's Temple in Seattle, had done that night what thousands had experienced from her over the years - she had, by reason of her spiritual gifting, inspired God's people to a greater vision of the Lord, his salvific work, and his plans for his people.

She got her start in ministry back in the early days of the Latter Rain revival at Glad Tidings Church in Vancouver, British Columbia. Hugh Layzell, whose father Reg pastored Glad Tidings back then, says,

"Also in those early years of revival, a number of the young people from the Church, under the leadership of Violet Kiteley and Charlotte Baker, held Saturday night meetings in the inner city area. This is where many people learned to preach a gospel message and lead people to Christ" (Hugh and Audrey Layzell in Sons of His Purpose: the Interweaving of the Ministry of Reg Layzell, and His Son, Hugh, During a Season of Revival).

It was not long, the Layzells write, before Reg noticed Charlotte's "definite calling and anointing for ministry.... Consequently, Charlotte Baker assumed the leadership of the little house church [in Bellingham, Washington]. Her husband, John, was not a preacher, but he fully supported his wife in ministry."

Part of the ministry entrusted to Charlotte was prophecy. She called her lengthy story-like prophecies, "prophetic parables." One such prophecy, which came to be entitled, The Eye of the Needle, can be heard at this link. That 11-minute prophecy was delivered in 1981 at the International Worship Symposium hosted by Shady Grove Church in Grand Prairie, Texas. The night that Charlotte delivered the prophecy the Symposium was meeting in a banquet room at Texas Stadium, which was the home of the NFL's Dallas Cowboys.

The prophecy became part of a book, The Eye of the Needle and Other Prophetic Parables.

In his endorsement of the book, Judson Cornwall said, "I have never met a person with a more dynamic and inspirational prophetic gift than Dr. Charlotte Baker. Her prophetic visions so reach the heart and paint pictures in the mind that they are almost impossible to ignore. I've seen entire congregations fall to their knees or faces, myself included, while she shared what she was seeing. I am thrilled that some of these revelations are now being released in book form."

David Schoch, himself a prophet, added his endorsement, "The truths that are brought forth through the exposition of these parables comes out of a burning heart and the mind of one of the greatest revivalists of our time. Reading this book will cause you to want to draw close to Jesus and to become more and more like him."

In addition to an 18-year pastorate at King's Temple that began in 1963, Baker also helped established a bible college in Ghana.

She retired in Canada and died September 16, 2014 at 92 years old. Her obituary can be read at this link.

The audio recording below was made during a worship service at King's Temple on March 19, 1978. Pastor Baker delivered a prophecy during the worship time. (The first nine seconds of the recording are poor, but the remainder is very clear.)

Charlotte Baker, Violet Kiteley (1966)Charlotte Baker, Violet Kiteley (1966) Sat, Apr 30, 1966 – 13 · Oakland Tribune (Oakland, California) · Newspapers.com Charlotte Baker, pastor in Bellingham (1958)Charlotte Baker, pastor in Bellingham (1958) Sat, Aug 23, 1958 – 17 · The Vancouver Sun (Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada) · Newspapers.com CB in Atlanta (1983)CB in Atlanta (1983) Sat, Oct 1, 1983 – 27 · The Atlanta Constitution (Atlanta, Georgia) · Newspapers.com CB at Shekinah (1984)CB at Shekinah (1984) Fri, Jun 15, 1984 – 10 · Kingsport Times-News (Kingsport, Tennessee) · Newspapers.com CB in Australia (1978)CB in Australia (1978) Sat, Oct 7, 1978 – Page 33 · The Sydney Morning Herald (Sydney, New South Wales, Australia) · Newspapers.com

Saturday, 27 December 2008

Winston I. Nunes: an elder statesman of revival(s)

Winston Nunes (39 years old)
It seems universally true in Christian denominations and fellowships that those pastors who are gifted to gather large congregations around their ministries are among the most sought-after conference speakers.

In the Latter Rain Movement, that understandable model could be observed in the ministries of the Bealls from Detroit, Charles Green, Violet Kiteley, and Thomas Wyatt, to name a few.

But, it is also true that occasionally there are pastors with smaller churches that are recognized as having exceptional anointing, including insight into the Word and ability to communicate. Conference attendees are enriched by those ministers, as well.

The ministry of Winston Inskip Nunes (1912 - 1999) belonged to the second group. He pastored Broadview Faith Temple in Toronto from 1967 to 1999, but the number of congregants was never commensurate to the depth of his ministry.

Benny Hinn wrote in his autobiography, He Touched Me, that Nunes was "one of the most remarkable Spirit-led ministers whoever lived."

Hinn was a teenager living in Toronto when he heard Nunes speak many times.

He is not alone, of course, in such dramatic testimony to the impact of Nunes' ministry. Author John Loren Sandford, who mentions Nunes in not less than five of his books (!), wrote in Healing the Nations: A Call to Global Intercession,
In one weekend conference I drank in more from brother Winston Nunes from Canada - at that time more than forty years in the Spirit - than from many others over many years! I would trot out a favorite theory and try it out on Winston. He would answer with such grace and wisdom that it was as though my thoughts smashed against a wall and came tumbling down to dust - but comfortably. Then I would try out another idea on him. He would come back with an "innocuous" question that impaled error like a dart pinning a target for all to see - and it felt freeing!
When Sandford speaks of Nunes making his point with a question, it brings to mind another of his rhetorical devices. If you never heard Nunes purposefully misquote a verse, then pause so that his audience would hopefully recognize - and have underscored for them - the error, then you probably never heard the man speak more than 15 minutes.

He would say something like, "Now the works of the devil are these; Adultery, fornication, uncleanness, lasciviousness, idolatry, witchcraft ..." and then allow his voice to trail off from the recitation of the list from Galatians 5. As the audience would signal - vocally or non-vocally - that he had misquoted the verse, he would continue, "What? Your Bible doesn't say that? Surely those things are the works of the devil. What's that? Your Bible says they are works of the flesh? Oh, I see." In so doing, he had underscored for charismatic audiences in the 1970s, for instance, that not everything had to do with the devil and demons - "the flesh" is the source of a great many problems.

Nunes - circa 1990
Perhaps such rhetoric is not your cup of tea, not how you prefer to learn. Well, Nunes' style was effective enough that it kept him in the limelight throughout most of his ministry. David Mainse had him on the Canadian daily TV show 100 Huntley Street many times, and he was a speaker at events like the Greater Pittsburgh Charismatic Conference in 1973, Jesus '76 in Mercer, Pennsylvania, and the non-denominational segment of the Conference on Charismatic Renewal in the Christian Churches in Kansas City back in 1977 (in all three cases, he addressed thousands).

His inclusion in the Kansas City conference and his participation in what were known as the Glencoe leadership meetings are clear evidence that he was viewed as an elder statesman in the Charismatic Renewal. Because of serious tensions among leaders in the Charismatic Renewal, annual meetings were held for a couple of decades to provide a forum that would hopefully promote real unity among charismatic believers. The high-profile leaders who met - by invitation only, according to Vinson Synan - became known as the "Glencoe group" because the meetings were held a small retreat in Glencoe, Missouri. Synan says in his book, An Eyewitness Remembers the Century of the Holy Spirit, "All major streams of the renewal movement were ... represented in the Glencoe meetings," adding that independent Pentecostals were usually represented by "Winston Nunes and Maxwell Whyte."

Not too bad for a pastor who only spoke to a couple of hundred parishioners on Sunday mornings.

For many years, Nunes also hosted a pastors' conference at his church in Toronto. One year, the guest speaker Art Katz, who was famous for making provocative statements, made a remark that included crude language. He turned to Nunes and said, "You don't mind if I say [omitted for crudity] do you?" The veteran pastor replied calmly, "Yes, I do." Nunes had the stature to draw pastors to an annual conference and to withstand a famous speaker who stepped out of bounds. For Nunes, being a Pentecostal or Charismatic meant a lot more than the gifts of the Spirit, it also involved fruit of the Spirit - which speaks to the issue of character. Hence the name of his book, Driven by the Spirit: Living the Way of the Cross.

CONVERSION AND EARLY MINISTRY

Winston was born on the island of Trinidad in 1912. While he was yet a young boy, two missionaries from the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada (PAOC) - Ruth Pemberton and Clara Siemens - began to evangelize in the British West Indies. The Pentecostal Evangel published several articles about the pair preaching on Trinidad in the early 1920s.

At some point, Nunes came under the influence of their ministry because Gladys Asling writes of Pemberton and Siemens coming to her church in Peterborough, Ontario in the early 1930s "and with them came one of their converts, a young man by the name of Winston Nunes."

Whether before leaving Trinidad or perhaps upon a return, Nunes served for a time as the chaplain of Carrera Island Prison, located a short distance from Trinidad.

Winston and Hilda
The 1930s was a foundational decade for Nunes - he graduated from Bible college in Canada, was ordained by the PAOC, and got married to Hilda Klassen, an accomplished pianist from Saskatchewan (the Nunes would sometimes entertain folks by sitting next to each other on a piano bench and playing a duet).

The January 22, 1944 issue of the Pentecostal Evangel tells us not only what he was doing that year but what had transpired since the 1930s. Pastor A. B. Crabb from Puyallup, Washington wrote, "December 19 [1943] was the closing day of a 6-week evangelistic campaign with Brother and Sister Winston I. Nunes at the Pentecostal Assembly of God. Evangelist Nunes is from the Isle of Trinidad in the British West Indies, and for several years has been evangelizing throughout Canada."

THE LATTER RAIN OUTPOURING

Evangelizing is what he was doing when he first experienced what became known as the Latter Rain Revival. That Holy Spirit outpouring began at North Battleford, Saskatchewan in February 1948 at the Sharon Bible College, led by George Hawtin and others.

Impressed by what he had seen of the revival, Reg Layzell, the pastor of Glad Tidings Church in Vancouver, British Columbia, invited George Hawtin and his brother Ern to minister at his church in November of 1948. Hugh Layzell, Reg's son, writes,
Coincidentally, Evangelist Winston Nunes was preaching at Broadway [Pentecostal Church in Vancouver] when the revival meetings began at Glad Tidings. Possibly out of curiosity at first, but certainly with a desire to see God move again, in a fresh outpouring of His Spirit, Nunes began coming over to check out the revival meetings after he had preached at Broadway. Nine pm was just in time for the Word and the prophetic ministry, which continued until later every night (in Sons of His Purpose: the Interweaving of the Ministry of Reg Layzell and His Son Hugh During a Season of Revival).
It seems that Nunes headed to Oregon - empowered by what he experienced at Glad Tidings - and conducted meetings there because the February 1949 issue of the Sharon Star (the Hawtins' publication) noted, "we received word also today from Salem, Oregon of the wonderful blessing being spread by Brother W. I. Nunes since hands were laid on him and gifts began to operate in power."

Myrtle Beall
Myrtle Beall was another person who had the prophetic presbytery lay hands on her, and she was prophesied over by Ern Hawtin. When she returned to her church in Detroit, the revival broke out powerfully there December 5, 1948, and going forward Bethesda Missionary Temple became a major hub for the revival's activity.

Nunes and Myrtle Beall became closely aligned by their experience of revival, so much so, that Nunes traveled to Detroit for meetings and went on Beall's radio broadcast with her early in 1949 to talk about the revival.

Beginning February 13, 1949, at the dedication of Bethesda's brand new sanctuary seating 1,700, the revival's intensity required that services be held twice-a-day, six-days-a-week for the next 3 1/2 years. So many services require a lot of preaching (and preachers) and Nunes became a frequent guest speaker (somewhere during this period he also took on an interim pastorate at a church in Tacoma, Washington).

The Assemblies of God, which had recognized the ministries of both Myrtle Beall and Winston Nunes, was concerned about some of the practices and beliefs of those involved in the Latter Rain revival (despite the fact that the longtime Pentecostal Evangel editor Stanley Frodsham visited Bethesda in February 1949, and thereafter, joined in the revival himself). The laying on of hands, resulting in personal prophecy - one of the hallmarks of the Latter Rain revival - was a particular irritant. Eventually, fellowship with the Assemblies became untenable for Beall, Nunes, Frodsham, and many others.

Included in a March 24, 1951 letter from the executive office of the General Council of the Assemblies of God was a paragraph informing credential holders that the ministry of Winston I. Nunes was "not approved." The letter explained that on December 19, 1950, the AG's Executive Presbytery met with Nunes,
and after a long conference with him, it was the opinion of the Executive Presbyters that he had not materially changed his views concerning the teachings and practices of the so-called New Order Latter Rain. The Executive Presbytery was willing to give Brother Nunes every consideration possible, but at long last, felt compelled to take the position that his ministry be not approved for the Assemblies of God.
Despite the pain such ostracization would bring, Nunes was not left without friends. The revival had become international in scope. Thousands were flocking to Bethesda's daily experience of revival, as well as to places like the Dixie Camp Meeting in Houston, Texas in June of 1951. And he was still welcome at the World Conference of Pentecostal Churches in July 1952.

So, while not taking separation from his Assemblies of God brothers and sisters lightly, there was still much ministering to be done and many to fellowship with. But, down the road, there was more pain to come.

As rich and involved as his fellowship with the Bealls and Bethesda had been, it too would experience a rupture. I have seen - firsthand - written confirmation of that rupture (the document was written in the early 70s, but I do not know exactly when troubles first arose between Nunes and the Bealls). The frequent invitations to Bethesda's pulpit were curtailed. And while I have firsthand knowledge of the shutting down of fellowship between Nunes and Bethesda, I do not have firsthand knowledge of what caused it. I have been told secondhand information, but would not think to share it (it is the policy of this website to not publish any information that I cannot verify).

Their paths would still cross from time to time. For instance, Nunes and Myrtle Beall's son James were both speakers at the Greater Pittsburgh Charismatic Conference in 1973. Nunes and Bethesda had many mutual friends. But for years, the once close friends remained distant.

Thankfully, and seeming to occur suddenly, fellowship was restored in the final decade of Nunes' life. In a way that importantly modeled reconciliation to friends and followers of both parties, the friends behaved as friends once more. On a least two occasions, the elderly Nunes was warmly welcomed back into Bethesda's pulpit.

(And it is important to note that from about the mid-1980s the rift between many Latter Rain ministers and the Assemblies of God began to heal, as well, albeit slowly. God's people, so richly and thoroughly forgiven by him, were finding courage to forgive and be reconciled to one another.)

ELIM: A SUSTAINED FRIENDSHIP

While the ruptures in fellowship with the Assemblies of God and Bethesda Missionary Temple were painful experiences, Nunes always had one place, from 1949 on, that he could call 'home' - Elim Bible Institute in Lima, New York. It was a Pentecostal bible college founded by Ivan Q. Spencer in 1924.

Winston and leaders from Elim first connected at Bethesda in Detroit during the early days of revival there. Marion Meloon, Ivan Spencer's biographer, wrote about how Ivan and his wife Minnie, and then later, his son Carlton and his wife Elizabeth (and a group of others) traveled to Detroit to investigate reports of revival. They were thrilled to find that a revival had indeed broken out.

Meloon writes, "Ministering in apostolic authority were Winston Nunes, Paul Stutzman (both became close Elim friends and trustees), Elmer Frink (who later became a teacher at Elim), Stanley Frodsham (who became a close Elim associate), Mrs. Beall, and her son, Jim" (in Ivan Spencer: Willow in the Wind: A Spiritual Pilgrimmage).

She further reports that months later, at Elim's annual summer camp meeting, "the camp Bible teacher Winston Nunes, with Fred Poole, Paul Stutzman, and T. Arthur Lewis laid hands on Ivan and Minnie, setting him apart for apostleship and travel among the churches, across the nation and overseas. This was in confirmation to what God had been speaking in the depths of Ivan's heart, and Minnie's, concerning an expanded ministry to the whole Body of Christ" (in Willow in the Wind).

In subsequent years, Nunes would travel from his home in Toronto to minister in many Elim camp meetings and at other Elim events, as well. The decades of sustained fellowship must surely have been a stabilizing and nurturing tonic.

He was also able draw from his experiences in classical Pentecostalism and the Latter Rain Movement to give counsel to many Elim instructors and ministers who would, just as he did, go on to play significant roles in the Charismatic Renewal that began in the 1960s - women like Sylvia Evans, and men like Bob Mumford, Paul and Robert Johansson, Brian Bailey, Costa Deir, H. David Edwards, and Michael Cavanaugh.

So significant and so appreciated was Nunes' ministry at Elim over the years, that his memory will be perpetuated by an important initiative in the Elim Fellowship.
Named after the late Winston I. Nunes, an extremely influential Elim teacher and minister who had a role in shaping the lives of countless young ministers, the "Winston I. Nunes Growth Seminars" are Elim Fellowship's mentorship fast track for our emerging leaders. (from the W.I.N.G.S. website)
That is very appropriate given that Winston was well-experienced in the challenges of pastoring a small church, as most young ministers do; yet he also serves as one model for those in the Elim Fellowship whose ministries will have a wide-ranging scope - ministers who may themselves one day be considered elder stateswomen or statesmen of a revival in their generation.

[Winston Nunes preached the sermon below on September 26, 1967. It begins at the 3:05 minute mark.]


Nunes on the platform in Kansas City in 1977
Nunes is listed among the non-denominational speakers in KC in 1977
Easter 1952 - one of the many times Nunes was a guest speaker at Bethesda
May 1973 - Greater Pittsburgh Charismatic ConferenceMay 1973 - Greater Pittsburgh Charismatic Conference Sun, May 13, 1973 – Page 33 · The Pittsburgh Press (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) · Newspapers.com Winston Nunes (Mar 1999)Winston Nunes (Mar 1999) Wed, Mar 3, 1999 – 16 · National Post (Toronto, Ontario, Canada) · Newspapers.com
Paul & Joe Garlington, Nunes, Jessy Dixon with Shackett (Oct 1991)Paul & Joe Garlington, Nunes, Jessy Dixon with Shackett (Oct 1991) 19 Oct 1991, Sat The News Tribune (Tacoma, Washington) Newspapers.com NATIONAL CONVENTION (1951) Wyatt, Beall, Nunes, JohnsonNATIONAL CONVENTION (1951) Wyatt, Beall, Nunes, Johnson 03 Nov 1951, Sat St. Louis Globe-Democrat (St. Louis, Missouri) Newspapers.com

Friday, 26 December 2008

The restoration of prophecy in the Latter Rain revival

The Latter Rain revival that began in North Battleford, Saskatchewan in February 1948 was refreshing and restorative. Pentecostal historian Vinson Synan explains,
The Pentecostal movement was at a low ebb in 1948, with a growing dryness and lack of charismatic gifts.  Many who heard about the events in Canada believed that it was a new Azusa Street, with many healings, tongues and prophecies (emphasis mine; quote is from An Eyewitness Remembers the Century of the Holy Spirit).
Ernest Gentile
Ernest Gentile is a veteran author, pastor, and prophet (M. D. Beall referred to him as "a seer"), and summarizes well what is meant when we read about prophecy in the New Testament:

"Explained simply, prophecy occurs when a prophetically inspired person extends his or her faith like a spiritual antenna, receives some divine thoughts from God and then speaks them forth by the power of the Holy Spirit to an individual or group for the glory of God" (from Your Sons & Daughters Shall Prophesy: Prophetic Gifts in Ministry Today).

Gentile's book is a tremendous resource. In the book's foreward, the late C. Peter Wagner wrote, "Your Sons and Daughters Shall Prophesy is one of a kind - a book that anyone who wants to be thoroughly informed about prophetic ministry today should read and digest. It is loaded with excellent research on biblical foundations, prophecy through Church history and the prophetic movement today."

Gentile, who co-pastors in New Mexico with his wife Anna, has also helpfully made available free of charge a 10-page compendium of prophecy references in the New Testament. That document can be accessed at this link.

"Local church prophecy springs from the same anointing and inspiration that causes a person to speak in tongues," Gentile writes in Your Sons & Daughters. "Fluency in personal, devotional 'spiritual language' greatly facilitates the ability to experience inspiration and speak with prophetic unction. Tongues and prophecy are closely allied and have an overlapping effect, since they are both inspired utterance."

Many Christians have been taught to be wary of the type of prophecy that was restored in the Latter Rain revival - the type that Gentile is talking about. Their teachers have told them that it is dangerous because, among other things, it is an attempt to add to God's Word, the Bible. In the following three-paragraph passage from Your Sons & Daughters, Gentile pastorally corrects this erroneous thinking,
I contend (here and throughout the book) that we should expect actual prophecy - that is, direct statements of God's immediate thoughts for a given situation and people, delivered under the impetus of the Holy Spirit. The prophetic anointing brings an electrifying, edifying effect not achievable with ordinary preaching and teaching.
Prophecy comes as a "now word," the present expression of a contemporary God who is truly present and concerned. The truths and principles of the Scripture suddenly focus on a specific audience at a specific place at a specific time. This was brought home to me when a teenage girl told me after a prophetic service in her Oklahoma City church, "Although I've gone to church, I never realized before that God was really that interested in me...."
Prophecy is not meant to replace or supersede the Bible, but when used properly it does make Bible truths more relatable by awakening people to realize God is interested in them, both now and in their future.
Charles Green speaking a Word
A prophecy I heard back in the mid-1970s in New Orleans, Louisiana illustrates perfectly what Gentile is saying. It was at a convention at Word of Faith Temple, pastored by Charles Green.

The prophecy was not a recitation of the events of Luke 5:1-11, but the prophecy's theme was based in that Biblical passage. With many pastors present in the large gathering, Green prophesied to the effect that: many ministers had toiled all night and were discouraged ... and wondered if they should give up their nets ... but the Word of the Lord was coming to them that they should launch out into the deep and let down their nets ... because the Lord was going to give them a great catch (I have not put any part of my greatly-abbreviated account of the prophecy in quotes, and have had to make use of ellipses because four decades later I cannot quote it verbatim, but its highlights, eloquence, and dynamism remain with me to this day - and, no doubt, also to any pastors who came to the convention discouraged but went home and experienced a "harvest" of souls).

In that prophecy, Pastor Green was not in any way adding to the Word of God, but the Spirit was inspiring him to link Luke 5 to the situation of discouraged pastors present. In effect, the same words that motivated Peter to "launch out into the deep [waters]" were now being used to motivate and re-energize a specific group of 20th-century pastors for their task.

Here are links to two more prophecies given by ministers with Latter Rain revival backgrounds (just as Gentile and Green have):
In addition to congregational prophecy, personal prophecy (as in I Timothy 4:14) was restored during the Latter Rain revival. Commenting on the initial Latter Rain outbreak at the church M. D. Beall pastored (Bethesda Missionary Temple), the pastor's daughter, Patricia Beall Gruits, wrote, "Although there had been a revival that began years earlier at Bethesda, this Sunday [December 5, 1948] marked the beginning of what would be known as a Latter Rain Revival - a revival marked by a new sound of worship and the laying on of hands with prophecy" (included in her mother's memoir, A Hand on My Shoulder).

Three examples of this type of prophecy, delivered in prophetic presbyteries, are included below:
A DRAMATIC TESTIMONY

Charles Green and David Schoch both delivered prophecies at Bible Temple in Portland, Oregon back in 1973 that dramatically underscore the validity and blessing of prophecy (today, Bible Temple is known as City Bible Church).

Dick Iverson was senior pastor of Bible Temple and president of Portland Bible College at the time and in his book, The Journey: A Lifetime of Prophetic Moments, he recounts how Green had prophesied that Bible Temple should begin a much-needed building project. However, Iverson and his congregation did not seem to be able to get the project off the ground. The following lengthy quote from the book picks up the story where Schoch arrives and was prompted to give a follow-up prophecy to Green's.
David Schoch came to Bible Temple for our "prophetic assembly" in April, 1973, and one morning when he began to prophesy, his word was almost a rebuke to us. "Rise up and don't profane my word. Knock out these four walls and build as I said." Then he prophesied that we should go back and listen to what the Lord had already said to us.
Even as he spoke I thought to myself, "There's no way we can knock out these four walls." We had attempted to buy the remaining land behind us and to the side of us but it was not available. Now the Lord was saying to rise up and knock out the four walls.
Brother Schoch continued, "Even now the walls are falling." I thought to myself, "I sure hope you are in the Spirit, Brother Schoch, because there's no way we can build any more here." Also, I worried that what he'd said would bring confusion to the people who had supported my efforts to buy out in the suburbs.
The very same day of the prophecy, one of the Bible college students came to me and said, "You know, the home that joins our property in the back of the building?" I said, "Yes," knowing it quite well as that particular piece of property was critical if we were ever to build more in that neighborhood. The house was on a very large lot and I'd tried to buy it many times. However, since the owners hated the church, they had absolutely refused to sell.
"Well," the student went on, "last night something strange happened. We heard this loud crash like a car wreck and when we went outside to investigate, we discovered that the retaining wall on that property had fallen down."
The full length of that retaining wall which had stood in front of the house for probably fifty or sixty years had fallen over onto the sidewalk for no apparent reason. Suddenly I remembered the prophecy, "even now the walls are falling." And, of course, the prophet had spoken with no knowledge of what was going on outside.
I went back into the office and asked our administrator, Warren Steele, to write a check for ten thousand dollars. He looked at me with amazement and said we didn't have ten thousand dollars in the bank. I told him to write the check anyway and I would make sure it was covered. I knew the Holy Spirit had spoken to us and that God was doing something supernatural.
I walked over to the neighbor's house and knocked on the door. I'd talked to him many times in the past, and he'd always mocked the church while refusing to sell. This time, though, when he came to the door and I asked him again he agreed to sell. Of course, he wanted more than it was worth - fifty thousand - but I gave him the ten thousand as earnest money and within thirty days we'd raised the additional forty thousand from among the congregation. The wall falling down as confirmation of the prophetic word was a rather dramatic testimony as to what the Lord wanted us to do.
Brother Schoch had also prophesied that we were to go back and listen to what God had previously said, and, when we did go back to Charles Green's prophetic word we found it very interesting. The word of the Lord that came through Brother Green was that we were to rise and build for the Lord was going to make us a praise in the city. We then realized our searching for acreage outside the city limits had not been intended by the Lord. We were to be a praise in the city! So we committed ourselves to building where we were.
We immediately launched a fund raising project and began to buy up other properties in the general area, both for parking and for the Bible college. We also began to draw up plans for a new auditorium to seat fifteen hundred people (in The Journey: A Lifetime of Prophetic Moments).
Finally, in the videos below, David Cannistraci and Robert Morris give teachings on prophecy.


Wednesday, 24 December 2008

Joseph Mattsson-Boze, a thoroughgoing revivalist

The church Mattsson-Boze pastored in Chicago, Illinois (photo courtesy of Winston Mattsson-Boze)

In a ministry that lasted more than five decades, Joseph Mattsson-Boze involved himself in true revivals wherever he found them.

Whether as a pastor, a missionary, or the editor of a magazine, Mattsson-Boze followed and publicized the moving of the Holy Spirit.

Joseph Mattsson-Boze
This brought him into contact - and ultimately, friendship - with many of the household names of revival such as David du Plessis, Lewi Pethrus, William Branham and many more.

And in October 1948, he got involved with the subject of this website, The Latter Rain Movement of 1948.

That revival got its start in North Battleford, Saskatchewan in February of 1948, and the ministers who led the work there (George Hawtin and others) were invited to speak at a convention October 24-31 in Edmonton by Pastor A. W. Rasmussen.

William Faupel, one of the historians who has written about the Latter Rain Movement, says, "One of the persons present, J. Mattson Boze [sic], an Independent Assemblies of God pastor and editor of The Herald of Faith, returned to his church in Chicago, Illinois, transformed. His church would become a strategic center for the Movement and his magazine a leading voice for the revival activity" (in Faupel's Ph. D. dissertation, The Everlasting Gospel: The Significance of Eschatology in the Development of Pentecostal Thought, University of Birmingham, UK, 1989).

The transformative power of the Edmonton meetings was testified to by Ern Baxter, no stranger to the power of the Holy Spirit, having traveled for several years with the healing evangelist, William Branham. In recounting some of the highlights of his ministry, Baxter said,
Another momentous thing happened - at least for me and many others - and that's something called the Latter Rain.... I went to their second convention in Edmonton, Canada and I never saw such a concentration of the power of God. This was a tremendous movement (in recording number EB001, "An Autobio and Intro," on the website, brokenbreadteaching.org).
Richard Riss, whose book, The Latter Rain Movement of 1948 and the Mid-Twentieth Century Evangelical Awakening, is the most complete account to date of the revival, quotes James A. Watt, one of the North Battleford leaders, "Special healings were wrought: deaf heard, blind saw, cancers were healed, and sick bodies made whole. Sinners were saved, and the precious blood of Jesus availed in it all" (in Riss' paper, Singing in the Spirit in the Holiness, Pentecostal, Latter Rain, and Charismatic Movements, 1995).

Watt also reported that the Edmonton meetings were the first time that the phenomenon of the 'heavenly choir' was experienced in the Latter Rain revival. Primarily, the term refers to the harmonious sound created by the gathered worshippers' individually spontaneous songs of worship. Yet, as folks like Watt assert, there is also a supernatural aspect to the phenomenon. He says of the worship experience in Edmonton, "Heaven's very strains filled the whole church. It was as a mighty organ, with great swelling chords, and solo parts weaving in and out, yet with perfect harmony" (in Riss, Singing in the Spirit).

We would like to think that such outpourings and experience of the Holy Spirit would bring tranquility to the Body of Christ, but that is often not the case. Usually, many are being blessed and refreshed, while some are rankled at things that seem new and unfamiliar to them. Such was certainly the case in the Latter Rain revival.

Joseph Mattsson-Boze navigated safely through the choppy waters of blessed Latter Rain co-revivalists on one hand, and suspicious Pentecostal leaders on the other - all the while having to be careful of the occasional Latter Rain adherent who came up with heretical doctrines or fell into immorality.

Winston and his wife Ingrid
In a blog post in 2005, one of Joseph's sons, Winston, wrote, "I'm think[ing] a bit about the accusation that latter rain people are 'neo-montanists.' The Montanists were people in the early centuries of the church who relied on the Holy Spirit more than on the Scriptures. Certainly there are people like that around today, but our tradition has always been to let the Scriptures judge any prophecy or ministry.

"The lists of things they accuse latter rain-ers of seems silly. I grew up in the revival and didn't see those things. I'm sure they existed, but my father stood against them. He had the wisdom to not throw out the baby with the bathwater" (in, "Latter Rain," May 13, 2005).

Just over one year into the revival, some Pentecostals began to break fellowship with others due to concerns real and imagined. On April 20, 1949, the Assemblies of God sent out a six-page "special edition of the Quarterly Letter" for its ministers, warning them of what the AG called, the New Order of the Latter Rain:
For a long time little attention was paid to the reports reaching the headquarters office in Springfield, until finally it was learned that Mrs. [Myrtle] Beall, pastor of Bethesda Tabernacle [sic] in Detroit, Mich., had gone to Vancouver, B. C. and had been prayed with and hands were laid upon her. It is reported that she claims to have received the ministry of laying on of hands and is now exercising this ministry in company with others who are designated as prophets. We hesitate to refer to names and places, but this new order is being propagated from Detroit over four radio stations and on a daily schedule and therefore is being well publicized (in a letter dated April 20, 1949 from the executive office of the General Council of the Assemblies of God). 
By the end of 1949, ministers like Myrtle Beall, Vera Bachle, and Paul and Lura Grubb would be dropped from the AG General Council ministerial list. Stanley Frodsham, the editor of the AG's Pentecostal Evangel, was allowed to resign (but the resignation became necessary because of his Latter Rain involvement). In 1950, Mattsson-Boze wrote a letter to J. R. Flower, general secretary of the AG, defending the ministerial integrity of Winston Nunes, but to no avail, as Nunes would also be censured.

Then in 1956, although Mattsson-Boze was not a member of the Assemblies of God, an AG ministerial letter included a prohibition concerning ministering in his church. The December 5 letter read, "the Philadelphia Church is a non-co-operative [sic] church and ... its teachings and practices are completely out of harmony with the churches of the Assemblies of God."

David du Plessis
But, throughout this period of combined blessing and upset, Mattsson-Boze remained a respected leader even at the highest levels of Pentecostalism. For instance, his friendship with fellow Swede Lewi Pethrus never waned (Pethrus endorsed the Latter Rain revival in 1949, then expressed reservations in 1950).

Also, Joseph was chosen to serve alongside David du Plessis and the others on the executive committee of the 1949 Pentecostal World Conference in Paris.

As friends, Joseph and David shared many things, including a birthday - February 7, 1905; and when Fuller Seminary created the David du Plessis archive, du Plessis "requested that Mattson-Boze's letters be housed with his," according the David Allan Hubbard Library website.

The website tells how Mattsson-Boze also served on the executive committee for the first Pentecostal World Conference (Zurich, 1947) and, "One highlight of the conference for Mattsson-Boze was the agreement he authored with David du Plessis that allowed 'independents,' including Lewi Pethrus and the Swedish churches, to cooperate with the Pentecostal movement."

FRIENDSHIP WITH WILLIAM BRANHAM

Another friendship led down another avenue of revival - his friendship with William Branham from the Healing Revival that swept America in the 1940s and 1950s. Like Joseph's Latter Rain friends, Branham was a controversial figure.

Branham and Joseph
Though it is frequently asserted that Branham was the founder or leader of the Latter Rain Movement, that is not true. But, it is true that Branham's powerful ministry influenced the North Battleford leaders and that he had at least one true Latter Rain friend - Mattsson-Boze.

Proof that Branham's relationship with the Latter Rain revival was tangential is found in a sermon he preached at Joseph's Chicago church called, Philadelphia Church.

In the December 13, 1953 sermon, Branham relates how he had been threatened with the cancellation of a speaking engagement by Voice of Healing ministers if he preached at Mattsson-Boze's church (not something you would do if someone was the leader of a movement; e.g., who would threaten the general superintendent of the Assemblies of God against preaching in an AG church?!)  Branham responded:

"And here's what I want everyone to know from my heart: if you ministers are sitting here ... if you're Assemblies of God, if you're Oneness, if you're Baptist, Methodist ... or if you're first rain, second rain, fourth rain, Latter Rains, how many rains ... I don't care who you are. I don't care what church you represent. I'll go anywhere God leads me to go" (in the sermon, "Exploits of Faith" on williambranham.com).

Joseph reciprocated the loyalty shown by Branham. David Edwin Harrell Jr. notes, "During the 1950s the magazine most loyal to the work of William Branham was the Herald of Faith (1933 - 1970) published in Chicago by Joseph Mattsson-Boze" (in All Things are Possible: The Healing and Charismatic Revivals in Modern America).

The website for the Hubbard library adds, "The Mattsson-Boze papers stand as a rich resource, too, for studies of William Branham, another close friend of Mattsson-Boze's, about whom Mattsson-Boze published monthly articles from 1955 until Branham's death in 1965."

Winston Mattsson-Boze says, "Certainly he considered [my father] and Henry Carlson his most loyal friends!"

Such loyalty to Branham and consistent friendship with him could not have been altogether easy because Branham increasingly became controversial due to aberrant doctrinal beliefs, so much so, that Baxter had to disengage from Branham's ministry.

Joseph, of course, was not oblivious to the controversial side of Branham's ministry. When Branham died at 56 years old in a car crash in 1965, Joseph's tribute in Herald of Faith delicately noted, "there were several points of doctrine where we were a good deal apart, and seemingly could never agree...." (from "William Branham: In Memoriam", in Herald of Faith, February 1966; the complete text can be found below).

LIFE AND MINISTRY

Mattsson-Boze immigrated to the United States from Sweden in 1933 and pastored two churches: Rock Church in New York (four years), as well as, Philadephia Church in Chicago (18 years).

At Philadelphia Church, Clair Hutchins was head of the music department from 1944 - 1947. Hutchins would go on to pastor Beulah Temple in Chicago, as well as, churches in the east. He founded Brooklyn Tabernacle, now pastored by his son-in-law, Jim Cymbala. Carol Cymbala, Hutchins' daughter, leads the famous Brooklyn Tabernacle Choir.

Winston Mattsson-Boze says, "The Herald of Faith, originally published in Swedish, was originally a marriage of 2 early Pentecostal papers, Trons Harold and Sanningens Vittne (witness to truth). They were begun around 1917. My dad started as editor around 1940."

Herald of Faith merged with Gerald Derstine's Harvest Time magazine in 1970 ("But we kept the Herald of Faith name for our mission," Winston says).

Dan and Viola Malachuk
R. G. Robins adds, "In 1971, Dan Malachuk, a Pentecostal reared in New York's historic Glad Tidings Tabernacle, acquired Herald of Faith, Harvest Time magazine (itself a merger of the Pentecostal Joseph Mattsson-Boze's Herald of Faith and the charismatic Gerald Derstine's Harvest Time, both heavily influenced by the New Order of the Latter Rain). Malachuk renamed it Logos Journal, and turned it into the leading periodical for the charismatic movement" (in Pentecostalism in America).

In 1981, Logos Journal declared bankruptcy, eventually merging into Charisma magazine, according to cmnexus.org.

Like Philadelphia Church, the mission Winston mentions - Herald of Faith - continues to this day (Winston is currently chairman of the board). According to Herald of Faith's website, "Our founder, Joseph Mattsson-Boze, decided in 1959 to base this ministry on training village pastors, and we continue to see that as our bedrock mandate and all consuming passion. We exist today to develop pastoral leaders and strengthen local churches – worldwide!"

The Herald of Faith missions initiative was started after Mattsson-Boze resigned his Philadelphia Church pastorate in 1958. He launched "the east African work, where he and [T. L.] Osborn saw millions come to Christ. That was post-Latter Rain, but in fact started with a prayer God gave [my father] in 1949," Winston says.

He further explains:
In 1949, Dad had a prayer in his heart to preach to people who had never heard the name of Jesus. It stayed with him. In 1953, he heard the word Mombasa as he was studying late at night. He made inquiry and found Elim engaged in Kenya. In 1955, he held the first ever crusade in Mombasa. After a meeting, 3 African women came and asked if this man Jesus was an American. They had never heard the name before. That led to asking Osborn to go in 1957.
Marion Meloon's writings add:
The 1957 T. L. Osborn Crusade precipitated a flurry of training seminars for nationals, for the purpose of spreading the spiritual explosion effected by the Crusade. These were first held in Mombasa, then in other key cities; Nairobi, with missionary Paul Johansson as host, and Kampala, Uganda, with Arthur Dodzweit. American assistance in finances and teaching ministry came through Joseph Mattsson-Boze, Charles Weston, and others. Extension seminars fanned out through bush country where these hurriedly taught flaming national evangelists had multiplied themselves many times over. According, the number of bush churches zoomed from handfuls, to hundreds, to over 2000! (in Ivan Spencer: Willow in the Wind).
"In 1958, Dad resigned Chicago and held the first training," says Winston. "Near the venue was a monument to Ludwig Krapf, stating his prayer 100 years previously that Africa would be evangelized from the east coast. [Krapf] and his family are buried nearby."

Joseph Mattsson-Boze died in January 1989 at age 83. His wife was the late Daga Mattson-Boze, and besides Winston, they had a son Howard, and daughters Britt Lillian, Grace, and Joy.

Following is the complete text of, "William Branham: In Memoriam", from the February 1966 edition of Herald of Faith:
It is almost impossible to believe that William Branham is not with us any longer.
As the whole world knows, William Branham and your Editor were very close friends. We were "real buddies". In spite of that there were several points of doctrine where we were a good deal apart, and seemingly could never agree, the warm spirit of fellowship never ceased. For this I am very happy.
Rev. Branham had a great gift from God, but what always impressed me most in his life was his big warm heart. He had time for the smallest ones as well as the biggest ones. He gave out of his life from the river of God that flowed through him to the poorest of the poor as well as to the richest. But if he favored anyone, it was the poor.
This big warm heart is now cold in death but we, his many friends, will always remember his kind spirit and his willingness to help. We will remember him as Jesus remembered John. Jesus did not point out the weaknesses of John the Baptist in his trying hours, but said about him, "This is the greatest born of a woman." John was not without his faults, but Jesus did not talk about that. He talked about John as John was at the height of his career when he stood there at Jordan and the people flocked to him in repentance.
I can picture the tremendous gatherings and the tremendous results in the great meetings in which I often sat on the platform with Rev. Branham. Sometimes I was scared because of the deep sense of holiness that penetrated the meetings, but I never failed to see the gift of God in operation through His servant and to feel that warmth of love that flowed through his ministry. This is how I remember my friend, Rev. William Branham.
                                  - by Joseph D. Mattsson-Boze

(1953) From left to right: Daga and Joseph Mattsson-Boze, Daisy and T. L. Osborn, Gordon Lindsay, William Branham, and Ern Baxter.
Frodsham , Edwards, Bailey, Mattsson-Boze, Bredesen, Trombley at Elim (1966)Frodsham , Edwards, Bailey, Mattsson-Boze, Bredesen, Trombley at Elim (1966) Sat, Jul 2, 1966 – Page 4 · Democrat and Chronicle (Rochester, New York) · Newspapers.com MATTSSON-BOZE host the Bealls and Elmer Frink (April 1950)MATTSSON-BOZE host the Bealls and Elmer Frink (April 1950) Sat, Apr 22, 1950 – 17 · Chicago Tribune (Chicago, Illinois) · Newspapers.com DuPlessis & Mattsson-Boze, Henry Redman (1971)DuPlessis & Mattsson-Boze, Henry Redman (1971) Sat, Oct 2, 1971 – Page 6 · The Greenville News (Greenville, South Carolina) · Newspapers.com Mattsson-Boze, Mattsson-Boze, "associate editor" of Logos Journal (Oct 1971) Sat, Oct 2, 1971 – Page 6 · Asheville Citizen-Times (Asheville, North Carolina) · Newspapers.com