Showing posts with label #JOHNFETZER. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #JOHNFETZER. Show all posts

Friday, February 21, 2020

Loyal Friends


Job 6:14 
Good News Translation (GNT)
14 In trouble like this I need loyal friends—whether I've forsaken God or not.

In 1954 Dad was sent to Solusi, a ten-grade school in Zimbabwe, to make it into a four-year college. Naturally the Trans African Division of Seventh-day Adventists didn’t have all the money it was going to require. Raising funds was part of his assignment. Besides, Solusi had only a minimal amount of water available in its dams on seasonal streams. It was certainly not enough to support a college with many more students. Consequently, Dad built a new dam and enlarged an already existing one. He brought the government geologists on campus to search for good spots to drill for water. They marked out three sites, and he drilled at all of them. He even got a local water diviner to explore for water. This man pointed out another spot, and Dad drilled a well there, paying for it out of his own pocket. Interestingly, he got more water from that well than from all three geologist-located wells combined—but it still was not enough for a burgeoning college. Finally, the government built a very large dam on a larger, near-by river, and they brought water from there.

Many other major problems, such as housing and collapsing latrines, took much of his time to overcome. In 1956 Dad returned to the U.S. on a working furlough. He visited several retired church leaders and persuaded them to donate their libraries to Solusi. He visited John Fetzer, a radio-TV mogul, whom most people know as the owner of the Detroit Tigers from 1961-1983. He and John had been good friends and business partners before Dad went to Africa in the mid-1930s. When they parted, Dad became a devoted missionary, and John spent his skill and time becoming financially successful. John became very interested in Dad’s project to lift the educational level of Africans to that of world leaders. He and his wife, Ria, visited Solusi to see what Dad was doing and thereafter contributed toward the efforts to make it a working college.

Solusi University has grown and prospered over the years. During the terrible financial crisis Zimbabwe went through, it was the only university to remain open in the country. The number of students at that time was over 5,000. Currently 2,892 are enrolled there.[ii]

We are grateful, Lord, that You provide us with friends who can help us in times of need.


Sunday, February 2, 2020

Wealth or Love, Which Do You Want?


Song of Solomon 8:7 
World English Bible (WEB)
Many waters can’t quench love,
    neither can floods drown it.
If a man would give all the wealth of his house for love,
    he would be utterly scorned.

Fred Clarke and John Fetzer were best friends and partners in the radio business back in the late 1920s. Fetzer had bought WEMC and converted it to WKZO. This was the most popular radio station in southwestern Michigan. Fetzer later moved it to Kalamazoo. Then he started or acquired radio stations across the United States. During World War II he was the national radio censor for the U.S. Office of Censorship to make sure that secrets were not broadcast to the enemies. After the war he shut the office down. He stated later that if he hadn’t, it would have continued, and he “shuddered to think how powerful it might” have become. He owned the Detroit Tigers baseball team for twenty years and became famous in Michigan.

When Fred’s father died of a heart attack, Fred did a lot of serious thinking about where his life was heading. He, too, saw the possibility of great riches and an easy life, but he also saw the great opportunities of service to God. Over his father’s coffin he pledged his love and service to the Lord. He promised that he would do whatever God would have him do, go wherever God asked him to go, and never ask what his salary was going to be. He remained a good friend of John and persuaded him to help support the founding of Solusi University that became a major university in the emerging country of Zimbabwe. It was the only school of higher learning to remain open throughout the civil war and later disastrous, runaway inflation that destroyed the country’s economy.

Fred would occasionally speak of his opportunities with Fetzer, telling how fulfilling and satisfying his life choice had been since then. His educational work has benefited many of the countries of southern and central Africa. Although he was never wealthy, he lived a comfortable and beneficial life until his death at nearly 101 years old.

Oh Lord, may we scorn offers of wealth and resist circumstances that attempt to drive out our love for You.