Dave Roever Ministries

Dave Roever Wikipedia Bio – Who Is He? – Search (bing.com)

Acts 4:12
There is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved. So thankful for saving grace.

The Dave Roever Story – YouTube
He inspires military personnel worldwide, even in war zones such as Kosovo, Iraq, and Afghanistan. The people who are inspired by the former U.S. Navy Veteran want to know about Dave Roever Wikipedia details. Dave is an influential and uplifting public speaker who uses engaging humor to share his powerful story. He also delivers inspirational speeches to a range of audiences, including churches, public schools, youth groups, and men’s and business conventions.

Since 2007, he has led an organization called Operation Warrior RECONnect, which helps restore hope, provide tools for success, and offer training to wounded warriors, ensuring they have a meaningful future.Dave’s organization runs two Eagles Summit Ranch facilities in Colorado and south Texas to support this mission.

As per the sources, before he joined the United States Navy, he used to study at Bible College; however, there is no proof of him passing any exams that year.

Dave Roever grew up in a minister’s family in South Texas. At the height of the Vietnam War, Dave received his draft notice. Rather than serving in the infantry, he joined the U.S. Navy. He served as a riverboat gunner in the elite Brown Water Black Beret in Vietnam.
 
Eight months into his tour of duty in Vietnam, Roever was burned beyond recognition when a phosphorus grenade he was poised to throw exploded in his hand. The ordeal left him hospitalized for fourteen months, where he underwent numerous major surgeries.
His survival and life are miraculous.
 
Today with his humorous style, Roever is enthusiastically received both nationally and internationally as a public speaker. He is a superb communicator and speaks in a variety
of settings including churches, public schools; business, men’s and youth conventions; and military installations around the world. Roever has also been a frequent guest on national television talk shows. He established compassionate, ongoing missions work in Vietnam and is involved in other nations.
 
In every setting, Roever’s message is one of truth and hope.
Using his life as an example, he addresses issues relevant to his audience and
presents concrete solutions to life’s problems. Often drawing upon his war experiences of loneliness, peer pressure, disfigurement, and pain, as well as life’s triumphs, Roever weaves together a message of courage, commitment, and survival that touches and transforms those who hear him.
 
Thirty-four years after his injuries, the U. S. Department of the Navy corrected its oversight by awarding Roever his Purple Heart, along with several other service medals. Because of his wartime experience of service, injury, and recovery, he is uniquely qualified to speak to the needs of military personnel. He is called upon regularly to address troops on domestic military bases as well as those deployed around the globe. Roever is no stranger to the War on Terror, having done multiple tours in the Middle East.
 
In May 2005, Dave was awarded an honorary doctorate degree in recognition of his remarkable life and service. In April 2012, he was awarded The Outstanding Civilian Service Medal by the U.S. Department of the Army. In 2019, Dave and his wife Brenda celebrated 50 years of full-time ministry.
 
Roever is founder and president of three non-profit corporations: Roever Evangelistic Association, Roever Foundation, and REAP International, based in Fort Worth, Texas. Dave and his wife Brenda are co-founders of Eagles Summit Ranch in Colorado, as well
as Eagles Summit Ranch in Texas, where they help physically and emotionally injured servicemen and women “find their way home.”

image.png
Brenda Louise (Draper) Roever

June 13, 1949 – February 26, 2021
Fort Worth, Texas – Brenda Louise Draper was born June 13, 1949 to Verdell & Helen Draper in the small town of Boswell, Oklahoma. In the early 1950’s, the Draper family relocated to the community of Lake Worth, Texas, and found a church home at Lake Worth Assembly of God. Constantly pursued, and eventually wooed by the pastor’s son, Dave & Brenda would become sweethearts for life. 

Davey and Benny Lou were married July 15, 1967, when they said, “I do; for better or worse, in sickness and in health.” They would walk through a crucible of fire to endure
the horror of war and the long journey of recovery as no other couple could. Endurance, patience, and steadfast spirits would be the requirements for survival. Through it all,
that three-stranded cord would never be broken. 

Brenda was quiet and steady yet had a backbone of strength that her entire family and ministry leaned on. Her favorite thing in life was being “Grammy” to her four grandkids. They brightened her world with all their hugs, kisses, calls and text messages.
Each grandkid is individual and unique, and each had a special relationship
with her that is full of wonderful memories.

Brenda loved to ride her own Harley-Davidson motorcycle. She loved watching Perry Mason. She loved Blue Bell and wanted to hijack the ice cream truck. She loved the warm sun and beaches of Hawaii. There were a lot of things she loved, but her greatest adoration in this life was her family.
Brenda quietly passed from this earth into the loving arms of Jesus on February 26, 2021 at Harris Methodist Hospital in Fort Worth, Texas. She was preceded in death by her father and mother, Verdell and Helen Draper; her sister, Willie Williams; her brother and sister-in-law, Wilburn and Linda Draper; her niece, Sheryl Williams; and her nephew, Robert Sens.

Her beautiful life will forever be cherished by her surviving family:
her adoring husband of 53 years, Milton David Roever of Fort Worth, Texas; her son and daughter-in-law, Matthew and Jaime Roever of Junction, Texas; her daughter and son-in-law, Kimberly and Philip Chapin of Monument, Colorado; and her grandchildren, Kali Chapin, Colby Roever, Austin Roever and Kennedi Chapin.
She will also be missed by her brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law; Al and Arneta Roever, Beverly Squires, and Travis Williams. Her nephews and nieces: Gary Sens, Dale Sens, Steven Williams, Al Roever IV, Anthony Roever, Will Draper, Andrea Roever and Kellee Draper Kirkpatrick. She is also remembered by a host of in-laws and out-laws, extended family and loving employees with whom she shared her life and love.

Viewing and visitation were held on Friday, March 5, 2021
from 4 pm – 8 pm at Biggers Funeral Chapel. A private service will be held Saturday.
Friends are invited to a Celebration of Life service on March 13, 2021 at 10 am at
Bethesda Community Church, 4700 N Beach St, Haltom City, Texas 76137.
The Memorial Gifts may be made to: The Roever Foundation,
P.O. Box 136130, Fort Worth, Texas 76136.

Published by Star-Telegram from Mar. 3 to Mar. 4, 2021.
On Friday morning, after two weeks in the hospital, Brenda Roever, the wife of AG evangelist Dave Roever, died from complications linked to COVID-19 and entered
into the presence of Christ. She was 71.

Brenda was co-founder with Dave of The Eagle’s Summit Ranch ministries in Colorado and Texas. There they and their team train wounded warriors in areas of specific focus such as public speaking and marital and emotional recovery after devastating injury. However, Brenda was perhaps best known for her faithfulness in her marriage to Dave, her husband of 53 years, and being a key part of Dave’s testimony messages.

In 1969, a phosphorous grenade exploded in Roever’s hand when it was struck by a bullet during a battle in Vietnam. Roever’s face and body were so severely burned — literally still burning due to the phosphorus — and damaged, medics initially tagged him as KIA (killed in action). Burned beyond recognition, he was shipped home where he witnessed another burn victim’s wife take off her ring, toss it on the veteran’s bed, and walk away.

Dreading and expecting the same, Dave was stunned when Brenda came to his bedside, looked him in his remaining eye, and told him that she loved him.

God’s provision and Brenda’s loving support carried Dave through 60 surgeries throughout the years. Her devotion to — and continued love — for Dave, despite his marred features and many life and medical challenges, impacted countless lives. Even though she wasn’t a public speaker, her actions said far more than words ever could.

The Roever family is suffering due to the loss of Brenda as wife, mother, and grandmother. However, this steadfast, loving, and compassionate woman of faith lives on in them as well as the countless military — and non-military — lives her life has touched and encouraged even in the darkest of times.

Dave shared, “I am devastated, but not destroyed. We will NOT be denied our destiny!
I will move forward more passionately than ever. This ministry is committed to doubling
down on my mission — that none should perish.”

Brenda is survived by her husband, Dave; son, Matthew and Jaime Roever,
and their sons, Colby and Austin of Junction, Texas; daughter, Kimberly and Phil Chapin, and their daughters, Kali and Kennedi, of Monument, Colorado; and other family members.
She was preceded in death by her father and mother, Verdell and Helen Draper;
a sister, Willie Williams; a brother, Wilburn Draper; and a niece, Sheryl Williams.

A memorial service for Brenda will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday, March 13, at Bethesda Community Church in Haltom City (Fort Worth), Texas. The family requests that
in lieu of flowers, to consider making a donation to the Roever Foundation.

Brenda Roever, Evangelist Dave Roever’s Wife, Dies | AG News

image.png

Watch Online Free The Last Full Measure 2019 Movie – 123Movies (123-movies.lol)
William Hart. Pitsenbarger, (July 8, 1944 – April 11, 1966) was a United States Air Force Pararescueman who flew on almost 300 rescue missions during the Vietnam War 
to aid downed soldiers and pilots.
On April 11, 1966, Pitsenbarger was killed aiding and defending a unit of soldiers pinned down by an enemy assault during the Vietnam War. Before his death, he helped save over 60 men in the battle.[1][2] He was posthumously awarded the Air Force Cross, which was later upgraded to the Medal of Honor.[3]

The Last Full Measure is a 2019 American war drama film written and directed by Todd Robinson. It follows the efforts of fictional Pentagon staffer Scott Huffman and many veterans to see the Medal of Honor awarded to William H. Pitsenbarger, a United States Air Force Pararescueman who flew in helicopter rescue missions during the Vietnam War to aid downed soldiers and pilots.[3][4] 

Based on true events, the film stars Sebastian StanChristopher PlummerWilliam HurtEd HarrisSamuel L. JacksonJeremy Irvine, and Peter Fonda. It was the final film appearance of Fonda, who died before the film’s release; and Plummer’s final on screen appearance before his death in 2021, though it had been filmed prior to Knives Out, which was released before it.
Production began in the United States in March 2017, and it premiered in October 2019 in Westhampton Beach, New York.[5] It was released in the U.S. by Roadside Attractions  on January 24, 2020, and grossed $3 million against a $20 million budget.
Its title is from Abraham Lincoln‘s Gettysburg Address, where Lincoln honored the fallen, saying that they “gave the last full measure of devotion.”[6]

Plot
The Last Full Measure centers on the true story of Vietnam War hero William H. Pitsenbarger, a U.S. Air Force Pararescueman who personally saved over 60 men during the Vietnam War. During a rescue mission on April 11, 1966, Pits, as he was called, chose to leave the relative safety of his rescue helicopter to aid wounded soldiers under heavy fire, when others on his team declined to go. After saving many, he was ordered to leave on the last helicopter out of what became one of the war’s bloodiest battles. He chose to stay, sacrificing his own life to save and defend soldiers of the U.S. Army’s 1st Infantry Division.

32 years later, Pentagon staffer Scott Huffman, on a career fast track, is reluctantly tasked with investigating a posthumous Medal of Honor request for Pitsenbarger by his parents and Tom Tulley, Pitsenbarger’s partner on the fateful mission. Huffman seeks out the testimony of Army veterans who witnessed or were saved by Pitsenbarger’s extraordinary valor, including Takoda, Burr and Mott, who carry their own demons from their experiences.

As Huffman learns more about Pitsenbarger’s selfless courage, he uncovers a decades-long, high-level conspiracy: as of Pitsenbarger’s death in combat in 1966, the Air Force
had never put forth the names of enlisted personnel to receive the Medal of Honor.[a] 
This prompts him to put his own career on the line, potentially creating controversy around the company’s former commanding officer who ordered the highly dangerous mission, and who is now a US senator seeking reelection.

When a Senate effort to award the medal fails on the floor of Congress due to unrelated political infighting, Huffman goes public with the story, and ultimately the Medal of Honor is awarded to Pitsenbarger by presidential decree. Before the award ceremony, Mott finds the courage to deliver Pitsenbarger’s last letter to the airman’s former love.

 Pitsenbarger’s father, who is dying of cancer, and mother are in attendance as their son’s duty, courage and sacrifice is recounted. The Air Force Secretary presents the medal to the parents, then recognizes everyone in attendance, all of whose lives were influenced by Pitsenbarger’s actions, saying, “This is the power of what one person can do.” The epilogue points out that as of 2019, of the 3,489 Medal of Honor recipients among millions of US military personnel, only three have been enlisted in the Air Force.

The Winning Hand to Good Health by Goubeaux, Ken (amazon.com)
We live in a country that can send astronauts like Neil Armstrong to the moon and other explorers to the depths of the ocean, yet when it comes to exploring ways to defeat chronic diseases such as cancer, the best we can offer anyone is false hopes and empty promises.

We are all dealt different “hands” when it comes to our health.
And we are all looking for that winning hand—those cards that will
move you or your loved ones from feeling helpless and hopeless to living a healthier life.
The Winning Hand To Good Health is intended to be a reference—of information that
can help you address nutritional and supplemental concerns that might help stave off the effects of chemotherapy and radiation treatments. While it is no substitute for seeing a conventional-medicine doctor, the holistic medicine approach you’ll find inside will provide additional insights into playing your cards out.
image.png
This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Time limit is exhausted. Please reload the CAPTCHA.