AMAZING STORY
Pilot Shouldn't Have Lived to Tell...
By Rob Hull
The 700 Club
Pilot,
Mark Harting has an impressive history. “Thirty-three years of flying
single engine fighters all over the world, never having to shoot
anybody and I'm alive and I'm doing well. I never had to eject out of
an airplane. I’ve had parts and pieces fall off airplanes like things
do, but they train us well enough. I mean to be able to land an
airplane without an engine on a runway, you're ready. You're ready.”Mark Harting and his wife Coleen attribute his years of
safety while flying fighter jets in the Air Force to two things, his
military training, and God's hand of protection. Coleen says, “I was
honestly I can say never afraid. I just was in constant communication
with God when he was up in the air, just saying, 'Alright, You're with
him now. I don't have to think about that, I don't have to worry about
that.'”
“You know you hear a lot of people that, 'God's my
co-pilot.' That's absolutely wrong. God is my pilot,” says Mark, “He
gives me the skills to fly. He was always present in my cockpit.”
Mark retired from the Air Force in 2011, but he had a hard
time staying out of the cockpit. He trained to become an aerial
firefighter, flying a modified crop duster. Coleen was pleased with
Mark’s choice for a new career. “It was very exciting, I was very proud
of him, very happy to become the wife of an airborne firefighter.”
God made it clear to Mark that he was not alone. “I think it
was the second live drop that I did where I mis-dropped where the air
attack wanted me to drop, I was a little bit late. About three days
later I find out that it wasn't a late drop at all. It was basically
God's drop where there was a fireman who was in a Bulldozer who was
trapped, had lost his radio and things and because of all the smoke of
the fire nobody knew it. He couldn't communicate with anybody and I (the
water) hit him right on the head. And he saw what he needed to do and
he backed it out and drove out. That’s I went, ‘Alright I'm right where
God needs me to be. I'm doing what He needs at this time in my
career.’”
In the summer of 2011 Mark's flight group was called to
fight fires in Arkansas. After several long days of successful drops,
Mark took off again but this time something went very wrong. “I'm
climbing out, the trees are disappearing below the canopy. I'm looking
for traffic left, right. I'm going to start my turn here in a little
bit and that's when the world changed. All of a sudden the air plane
drops, and I lost about 75 feet of altitude, and instead of having a
clear cockpit now, it's full of trees.”
Mark dumped the water in hopes the lighter plane would
respond and rise up. It didn't. “I know I'm over the town. Houses are
going under me. There's no way that this airplane is going to out climb
this.”Mark looked for a place to crash the plane. He saw a small
back yard, but knew it would take a miracle to avoid hitting houses and
hurting people on the ground. “I knew I was going to have to crash. I
was going to have to put the airplane nose in to stop my forward
momentum and not take another house out. I'm doing 80 miles an hour.
It’s not like this thing just stops. It's going to take 1000 feet to
probably stop this on a normal runway let alone in someone's back yard.”
Mark's tail section glanced off a power line, helping him
towards his target. Then he crashed hard, destroying the plane. “I hit
the side of the airplane where the roll bars were and now I'm blacked
out I can't see anything cause I've taken part of the back yard out.
I've gone through a wood fence. I'm sliding. I don't know where,
whatever. And all of a sudden it just stopped.”
He threw open the door and got out of the plane unhurt. The
water and foam prevented any fire from starting. Rescuers arrived and
transported him to the hospital. Meanwhile, Coleen got a call that Mark
had crashed. “When I heard the words, 'There's been a crash. Mark has
crashed.' I'd be lying if I said that I didn't think, ‘Well, he's
dead.’ But I felt such a peace washing over me. In a moment your life
changes but in that instant God has hold of you. He had hold of me.”Mark recognizes God was at work. “I know the angels were
around me and they did a fantastic job to get me to that last place.
When I went back a couple days later, about three days later I looked
at the site, I was standing in the street and I was just crying. I was
going, 'How did You get that airplane with another tree off to the side
in that back yard?’ God’s going to get the glory on this one, He
really is because I did my part but I couldn’t put that airplane back
in that hole. I couldn’t. I mean when I sat there and I looked at that
spot there’s… ‘Mark you’re not that good.’ I’m good but I’m not that
good. God was totally involved in what was going on. He was the pilot
in the airplane to put it where He wanted me to put it. My job was to
do all the things that I learned in the military. ‘Fly the airplane
Mark. Trust God to help you do it.’”
The reason the plane suddenly lost altitude is still under
investigation. Mark and Coleen say they are grateful for God's faithful
love and protection through it all.“We're forever in awe of how He has worked in our lives. And
excited about what He has in the future because if you can survive a
plane crash like Mark did then God's got something even greater for us
and we're just hanging on.
Mark concludes,“To be able to continue to live on this earth to impact
lives for God is a blessing. But to know that He is that merciful and
gracious and loving that He would sacrifice his Son for somebody like
me it blows me away. So while I'm on this earth, what can I do for God
because what He has given me. Life is too beautiful and to short not to
do that, but I don't know what life would be like without God. I'm so
blessed that He is the focal point of my life.”
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