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Chaplain's Corner - June 16, 2005
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Greetings in the name of Jesus!
At
5:20 last Sunday afternoon, Reverend/Brother Pat Evans entered Paradise to spend
eternity with his Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. Please pray for the Lord's
peace that passes all human understanding for his wife Betty, their children,
Rob Brannon and his wife Wendy, Cheryl and her husband Brian, and all in Pat's
extended Christian family. Pat was 57 years old.
Pat was born in Pottstown, Pa., June 20, 1947. He developed his passion for
racing at a very early age, joining his mom at some of the great tracks in the
northeast-Reading, Nazareth, Langhorne, Trenton-while still a youngster. Many
was the time that we would be coming back late from a race that he would
reminisce about those early days and the great drivers he saw. I got an
education in Jan Opperman, Al Tasnady and some of the other big names of that
era.
After high school Pat joined the Navy to see the world. Not much of it was seen
and he took his discharge as soon as it was available, settling in Southern
California. There, he tried his hand at driving a dirt car and developed a
driving style that was to follow him thru out his life-much to the chagrin of
his passengers and many public servants charged with protecting others on the
road. He soon discovered what most of us know. To earn a small fortune in
racing, you need to start with a large one. He decided to come back east, and,
using the then current version of the GI bill, earned a degree in marketing from
the University of Connecticut. He got his start in the newspaper business after
college doing sales work and ultimately some reporting with the Norwich Bulletin
and other papers in the area.
It was during the mid '70s that Pat developed a yearning for a closer
relationship with the Lord. Once he was born again, he started to feel there
must be a way to combine his two loves, for the Lord and for auto racing. He
started talking with certain drivers and other personnel it the pits at various
tracks, and with his gift of gab, talked his way into saying a "little" message
at the driver's meetings. Finally he formed Racing With Jesus Ministries in
1978. In 1979, at the urging of a good friend-Val LaSieur, who owns and
publishes Speedway Scene-Pat started a racing column in the paper. At first it
was a brief message about the Lord followed by lots of racing news and his
opinions. It was the latter that caught the attention of drivers, whose side he
seemed to be on, and track officials/owners who were often on the receiving end
of pointed comments about how the race should be run, or the track operated.
But, he did get the reputation for being fair, honest and discreet-three traits
that helped him become the reporter people read and believed for the truth. That
allowed him to expand his Bible teaching in the column and touch more people.
Nonetheless, Pat was many times the voice in the wilderness, ignored by many,
listened to by few as he declared "prepare ye the way for the Lord".
I first met Pat at one of those times. He was at the Speedway Scene-sponsored
1980 Racearama sitting in a little 4x4 booth with a card table, two folding
chairs, a Bible and no audience. My wife must have spent two to three hours
talking to him to keep him company and to discuss her recent Born Again
experience. Me? I was there for the cars.
However, they must have had some prayer influence because I accepted the Lord
one month later and thus started the 25 year long, wonderful relationship with
Pat and his new ministry. Soon I was on the road almost every weekend with
him-many of you probably know me only as the tall chubby fellow who was either
standing in the background as Pat held court, or schlepping some podium, chair,
bookstand etc., or taking a collection at service. All vital jobs that needed
doing-well maybe not the standing part.
My first eye-opening taste of what it took for Pat to do his job was a mid-July
trip to Oxford Plains for the '80 Plains 250. There we were, driving up in an
un-air-conditioned Chevette with my feet out the passenger window, screaming
along at 75-80 mph (remember this was the double nickel era) hoping we got there
before the engine breathed its last. It was not the last learning experience.
Most people have no idea what it took Pat to pull off this ministry. First there
was the money side. Pat held a number of jobs during the 1980's, generally none
longer than several months to a couple of years, because his bosses either got
tired of him always needing time off to pursue his ministry obligations at a
track anywhere from northern Maine down to southern Virginia, or because they
didn't see eye-to-eye with him being so upfront with his love for the Lord. This
also meant that he never had a job where his income could support both his
day-to-day expenses and the extra cost of the ministry-travel, motels, meals,
etc. It was and remains today the biggest concern. Second was the time
investment. Not only was Pat doing all his ministry work at the track, and
holding down a job, he also had the column to write and the many instances of
counseling to cover. It seemed as if Pat were squeezing 27 hours into each day.
All those extra calls on his time were what made his efforts worthwhile. Pat was
never happier than when he was asked to preside over a wedding or a christening,
or was able to call me up and say another person had come to the Lord. THAT is
what he felt called to do. Each year, at yearend he would, with great joy, tell
us how many of each had happened during the year.
Over the years, Pat came to be accepted by more and more people. The turning
point was probably the best and worst weekend of his life however. In October
1985, at Martinsville, one of Pat's closest friends in racing, and one whom Pat
had considered his biggest challenge regarding acceptance of faith, Richie Evans
lost his life during practice. Pat was asked by track management to do a
memorial service for Richie. Ultimately they broadcast the service to all
15-20,000 in the stands at the time. People heard him for the first time in many
cases and realized that he was doing this job-the Ministry-for a reason, and it
wasn't money. It was a love of the Lord and the realization that these racers
needed some divine protection. It helped Pat through this loss that Richie had
told him earlier that week that he had found the Lord.
From this point on Pat earned new respect for who he was and what he did.
Attendance at services increased, more calls for ministering came in, more
weddings etc. A little more funding as well, but never enough.
In the early 90's Pat changed the home of his column to Area Auto Racing News,
thanks to the kindness of Lenny Sammons, to whom we are eternally grateful. He
also started taking on additional people to help out both in the office--thanks
Scott and Lisa-and at the track, first with some local representatives at places
like Wall Stadium in NJ and Grandview in PA, and then most recently with full
ministers like Dan Petfield who joined up in the late 90's and Don Rivers a
couple years ago.
The ministry will survive. But we will all miss our dear friend and brother. I
will miss times with him like the one in Virginia when he was stopped for going
85-90 on the way back from Martinsville(again double nickel days). The trooper
looked at Pat, walked away for awhile, came back, smiled and said in a very
reverential tone " Father, as a good catholic, there's no way I can give a man
of the cloth a ticket for this, but for the rest of the drive do you think you
could try to keep it below 75?" We must have laughed about that for 100
miles-but at the same time it kept us awake at the end of a long weekend when we
really needed it.
I will miss the many times we left for a track knowing that God had something in
mind for us. Like the time we drove all the way to the Shangri-la track in NY,
only to get rained out after arriving. On the way back we stopped at five-mile
point that was running, and after that show, we finished up at Orange County.
Pat had an anxiety attack while there and he was taken to the hospital. We
didn't know it at the time but God was preparing us. As we were getting ready to
leave the Hospital, an ambulance came in with a severely injured pit crewman
from a track accident, followed by his wife and two small children. Pat spent
hours in the early morning comforting that family that he didn't know. To this
day, I don't know whether that person survived or not-it was touch and go-but I
do know that God used His man to help the family through.
For twenty-five years Reverend Pat was there for "his" racers, pit crews, track
officials, and fans. In person and through his column, he tried to bring people
closer to the Lord and their salvation. Now the Lord has called him home with a
"good job, faithful servant". The ministry will go on, doing God's work as
instructed, But, we will miss tremendously our friend, our brother, and, at
times, our support-Patrick T.J. Evans. Rest in Peace, my friend.
Dick Wibbelsman
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Arrangements for Rev. Pat Evans- Calling hours will be at the Dougherty Brothers
Funeral Home, 595 Norwich Road, Rt. 12, Plainfield, CT 06374, 860-564-2296 on
Wednesday evening from 6-9 pm. Memorial service will be at the Quinabaug Valley
Alliance Church, Rt. 169, Canterbury, CT. on Thursday at 10:00 am with a service
at the Griswold Cemetery to follow. A reception will follow at the VFW Hall in
Jewett City, CT.
In lieu of flowers donations can be made for the continued support of the
ministry Rev. Pat started, Racing with Jesus Ministries
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