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The Rich History of Broken Hill: From Miners to Tree Planters

Broken Hill, a town born from the sweat of explorers and the grit of miners, carries a history that stretches back to 1844. It was then that Charles Sturt, a British explorer, set foot in the region. Sturt wasn’t alone on this journey; he had the wisdom of an Indigenous teenager named Topar from Menindee. Topar led him along Stephens Creek, a place the locals knew well. They pressed on together, and as they reached the Barrier Range, Sturt realized something crucial. The mountains in front of him weren’t just any mountains—they were a barrier, one that blocked his path to an inland sea he sought. And so, he named them the Barrier Range.

In the years that followed, the area drew the attention of settlers. Pastoralists began to move in during the 1850s, bringing their flocks and livelihoods with them. Their journey wasn’t easy, but the Darling River provided a reliable trade route, a lifeline connecting them to the outside world.

Then, in 1883, a man named Charles Rasp changed everything. He wasn’t an explorer or a soldier. He was a boundary rider, patrolling the fences of Mount Gipps Station, a remote patch of land. One day, while out on his patrol, Rasp noticed something curious in the rocks. He thought it might be tin. But he was wrong. It was much more valuable than that—silver and lead, glittering beneath the sun.

Rasp didn’t keep this discovery to himself. He gathered a group of six others, and together they formed the Syndicate of Seven. This group would go on to establish the Broken Hill Proprietary Company, known to the world today as BHP. The orebody they had uncovered was vast, the richest of its kind anywhere. By 1885, the small venture had grown into something huge. BHP became a giant in the mining world, and Broken Hill became the heart of it all.

Yet, by 1915, the ore reserves began to dwindle. BHP shifted its focus to steel production, and by 1939, the mining operations under BHP had stopped altogether. But mining didn’t die with BHP. Other companies continued to dig into the ground, and the mining legacy endured.

This is the backdrop of Broken Hill’s history, but it’s only part of the town’s story. The people of Broken Hill—miners, explorers, and everyday folk—wove their lives into this place. One of those people was an old miner named Tom Barrett. He didn’t discover silver or lead, but he found something just as valuable.

Tom arrived in Broken Hill long after the Syndicate of Seven had made their mark. He came from the coast, seeking work like so many others. The mines were his destination, but he soon realized that life underground wasn’t for him. The dust, the heat, the confinement—it all wore on him. So, Tom left the mines and opened a small shop on Argent Street. He sold tools to the miners and shared stories of his days in the pits.

One hot summer afternoon, an old friend from the mines, Jack, came by the shop. Jack had a look of frustration on his face, his brow furrowed from years of labor.

“Tom, I’m thinking of leaving the mines,” Jack said, slumping into a chair. “My back’s giving out, and the work’s getting tougher.”

Tom nodded. He understood. “It’s no easy life down there. But what will you do?”

Jack shrugged. “Don’t know. But I’ve had enough of being underground.”

Tom leaned back in his chair and thought for a moment. Then he spoke, his voice calm and steady. “You’ve spent your life digging into the earth, Jack. Maybe it’s time you did something different. Something above ground.”

Jack looked at him, puzzled. “What do you mean?”

“Think about it. The earth down there has given us all we have. Silver, lead, wealth. But it’s also taken a lot from us—our health, our time, even some of our mates. Maybe it’s time we gave something back.”

Jack raised an eyebrow. “And how do you suppose we do that?”

Tom smiled. “We plant something.”

The idea seemed odd at first, planting trees in the hard soil of Broken Hill. But Tom believed it was what the town needed. He wasn’t wealthy like Rasp, and he didn’t have grand ambitions of changing the world. But he could change the street he lived on. So, Tom started small. He cleared a patch of land behind his shop and began planting trees. Eucalyptus, mulga, anything that could survive the harsh conditions.

People thought he was wasting his time. “Nothing grows here, Tom,” they said.

But Tom didn’t listen. He watered the trees every day, even when water was scarce. Jack helped him, as did a few other miners who had also left the pits. Slowly, the trees began to grow, their roots digging deep into the soil, just as the miners had once dug deep for silver.

One day, a young boy named Sam walked by Tom’s shop. He watched Tom work the soil, sweat dripping from his brow.

“Why are you planting those trees?” Sam asked.

Tom wiped his hands on his pants and looked at the boy. “Because this town needs something that lasts. The silver will run out, but these trees—they’ll keep growing long after we’re gone.”

Sam didn’t quite understand, but he nodded and ran off to tell his friends.

Years passed, and Tom’s trees grew tall. They provided shade for the workers who walked by on their way to the mines. They cooled the street, offering a small reprieve from the scorching sun. And in time, people stopped doubting Tom’s efforts.

When Tom passed away, the townsfolk gathered by his trees to say their goodbyes. Jack was there, standing under the shade of the eucalyptus, remembering the day Tom had suggested they give something back.

“He was right,” Jack said quietly, speaking to no one in particular. “These trees—they’ll outlast the mines.”

And they did.

Tom Barrett never became famous like Charles Sturt or Charles Rasp. His name didn’t appear in history books. But his trees still stand today, a quiet reminder of the man who believed that Broken Hill’s future lay not in what they took from the earth, but in what they gave back to it.

The Power of the Word: Julie’s Journey as a Healing Evangelist

Julie stood before the church, a quiet hum in the air. The congregation waited. She had shared her story many times, but this one was special. Today, she wasn’t just telling them about her journey to becoming a healing evangelist. She would show them.

“I remember a woman testifying one time,” Julie began, holding the microphone steady. Her voice was calm but filled with purpose. “She looked like she should have died two weeks earlier when she first came to our healing school. Skin and bones, no strength left. But she stayed. Week after week, month after month, and she began to blossom like a flower in the sunshine.”

Julie paused, allowing the words to sink in. “Her color came back. She gained weight. And then one day, she stood up and testified.”

The congregation leaned in, hanging on her every word. “Everyone there knew a miracle had happened. You’d have to be blind not to see it.”

Julie stepped aside and nodded to the AV team. The lights dimmed, and the screen lit up with the video of the woman. In the video, the woman’s voice trembled but was full of joy.

“I guess I just got so full of the Word that there was no more room for the cancer,” the woman said. The room echoed with murmurs of awe as the woman in the video described her healing process.

Julie turned back to the crowd. “It’s not about how much Word you hear, but how much you receive. You have to let it in, let it work in you. The Lord will help you, but you have to stay with it.”

The pastor joined her on stage, nodding as he took the microphone.

Chapter 2: The Power of the Word

Pastor Joseph smiled warmly at the congregation. “Julie’s right,” he said. “You see, the Word is life. Proverbs says it’s life to those who find it and health to their flesh. The Word brings healing, but you have to receive it.”

He glanced at Julie, who gave a small nod of agreement. “Just like this woman in the video,” he continued, “you have to keep hearing and hearing. It’s not that healing takes a long time, but sometimes we don’t receive because of how we think. But if you’ll stay with it, if you’ll change your thinking, the healing will come.”

Julie smiled, remembering the days when she, too, struggled with doubt. “I used to think,” she said, “that healing was instant, like flipping a switch. But sometimes, it’s like planting a seed. You water it. You give it light. And it grows.”

Pastor Joseph picked up where Julie left off. “That’s right. It grows. And it blossoms, just like Julie said earlier. That’s the power of God’s Word.”

Chapter 3: Spiritual Exercise

Julie took the microphone again. “But it’s not just hearing the Word,” she said, pacing slowly across the stage. “You have to exercise your spirit. How do you exercise your body? You move it. How do you exercise your spirit? You confess. You speak God’s promises. You believe in your heart and say it with your mouth.”

The crowd murmured in agreement, and she continued. “Speaking in tongues, praising God, walking in love—these are all ways to exercise your spirit. I used to think that if you just fed your spirit with the Word and exercised it, you’d be strong. But then the Lord showed me something else.”

Pastor Joseph stepped in, looking thoughtful. “Drains,” he said simply.

Julie nodded. “Exactly. Drains. You can feed your spirit and exercise it, but if you’ve got drains, you’ll still be weak.”

The crowd was silent, absorbing the lesson. Pastor Joseph explained further, “Just like a bathtub with a drain, if you don’t close it, the water will keep flowing out. You can fill yourself up with the Word, but things like fear, worry, and strife will drain you.”

Chapter 4: Watch the Drains

“Fear will drain you,” Julie said, her voice firm now. “Worry will drain you. Too many involvements, things the Lord never asked you to do—those will drain you, too. You can be built up in a service, feel strong in your faith, and then get into strife or worry, and it’s like pulling the plug.”

Pastor Joseph added, “Strife is a big one. I’ve seen people get into arguments after a powerful service, and suddenly they’re weak again. Strife drains your spirit faster than anything.”

Julie nodded. “That’s why we must stay in love. Love isn’t a suggestion; it’s a commandment. Strife takes two people. But you can refuse to participate. When you choose love, you stay strong.”

The church listened intently. Julie could feel the atmosphere changing as they grasped this truth.

Chapter 5: Speak Life

“We’re going to act on this now,” Julie said, stepping forward with renewed energy. “Joel 3:10 says, ‘Let the weak say, I am strong.’ We’re going to speak life.”

She encouraged everyone to stand. The room buzzed with anticipation.

“Some of you have been feeling weak, in body or spirit,” she said. “But today, we’re going to declare strength. We’re going to say, ‘I am strong.’ And we’re not just saying words—we’re speaking God’s Word, words full of life.”

Julie led the congregation in declaring their strength. “I am strong,” they repeated after her, voices rising with each declaration.

Pastor Joseph closed his eyes, lifting his hands. “As you speak these words,” he said, “you’re releasing faith. Healing is being manifested.”

Julie smiled as she watched the people declare their strength, knowing that some were being healed even now.

“I’ve seen it before,” she said quietly to the pastor. “People who were bedfast, too weak to speak, now standing, shouting, and testifying. God’s Word is life.”

The service ended with a quiet reverence, the congregation transformed. As they left, Julie knew that many lives had been touched, not just by her words, but by the power of God’s truth.

Her journey as a healing evangelist had only just begun.

Miraculous Healing and Laughter: The Story of Eve

Julie stood before the congregation, a smile tugging at the corner of her lips. She wasn’t the type to use humor often, but sometimes, life threw situations at you that were hard not to laugh at. “Let me tell you about Eve,” she said, adjusting the microphone. “She came to one of our healing services in Worthing last December, and her situation… well, it was quite something.”

The crowd settled in, ready to listen.

“Eve had fallen, and it wasn’t one of those graceful movie falls, you know? She slipped, and boom—three bulging discs. Ouch, right?” Julie raised her eyebrows, and a few chuckles came from the audience. “That fall gave her sciatica so bad, she couldn’t even sit down without feeling like a pin cushion. And you know what the doctors suggested?”

She paused for dramatic effect. “They wanted to remove her nerves.”

The congregation gasped, and Julie couldn’t help but smile. “Yep, you heard me right. Remove. The. Nerves. I mean, I don’t know about you, but I’d like to keep all the nerves I can.”

The audience laughed, easing into the story. “So, Eve didn’t want that operation—smart woman. She came to our healing meeting instead, and let me tell you, things got interesting.”

Chapter 2: Shifting and Pulsing

Julie’s tone grew more serious, though a hint of amusement lingered. “When Eve came up for prayer, I could tell she was desperate. You could see it in her eyes—she was ready for healing. So, I prayed in Jesus’ name, right? Just like we always do.”

She took a deep breath, recalling the moment. “And here’s where it gets wild. As I placed my hand on her leg, I could feel something—shifting and pulsing—right under my hand. I’m talking real movement.”

Julie mimicked the feeling with her hand, her eyes wide for effect. “I wasn’t sure if I should be a healer or a chiropractor at that point. But it was the nerve. It was like it was straightening out, right there under my hand.”

The crowd murmured, intrigued.

“And then, just like that—boom—all the pain was gone. Eve knew she was healed. She looked up at me, and the first thing she said was, ‘I don’t even feel like I need to guard my leg anymore!’” Julie shook her head with a grin. “If you’ve ever had sciatica, you know that’s a big deal. No more tightness, no more pain. She was free.”

The congregation clapped, and Julie gave them a moment to soak it in.

Chapter 3: The Spirit of Infirmity

Julie continued, “Now, I don’t know about you, but I believe something bigger was going on there. As I prayed for Eve, I felt like I was casting out a spirit of infirmity. You see, the enemy likes to sneak in when we’re vulnerable—like after a nasty fall—and make things worse.”

She gave a light chuckle. “Kind of like when you’re already having a bad day, and then you spill coffee on yourself. That’s what the enemy does. Takes advantage of the shock. But that day, Jesus set her free.”

Julie could see the crowd connecting with the story, nodding their heads. “I could feel it leave her. That spirit had no choice but to get out of there. And when it did, she was completely healed.”

She paused for a moment, letting the weight of it sink in. “Jesus is in the business of setting people free, whether it’s from pain, sickness, or even from bad coffee spills.”

The congregation laughed again, lightening the mood.

Chapter 4: More Miracles to Come

Julie smiled as she continued, “And it wasn’t just Eve that day. No, Jesus was on a roll! We saw people healed from all kinds of conditions. Two ladies even gave their lives to Jesus.”

Pastor Joseph stepped up beside her, laughing softly. “Julie, you’re right. We’ve seen so many miracles, it’s almost like Jesus enjoys showing off. But He’s not just showing off; He’s showing His love.”

Julie nodded. “Exactly. And guess what? We’re not done. The next meeting is tomorrow at 10:30 a.m. and again at 6:30 p.m. in Worthing. I know it’s Sunday, but that’s the perfect time for a miracle, don’t you think?”

The crowd clapped, some already looking excited for the next service.

Julie grinned, “Bring your sick friends, your unsaved neighbors, even your grumpy cousin who complains about everything. Everyone’s welcome.”

Chapter 5: The Invitation

Pastor Joseph took the mic again. “We’ve got some exciting weekends ahead. After Worthing, we’ll be in Switzerland next weekend, and the weekend after that, Surrey. You can come to any of those meetings. We’re expecting even more miracles. God doesn’t stop moving just because the weekend ends.”

Julie nodded in agreement. “Miracles aren’t on a schedule. But we’re here to tell you that if you need healing, don’t wait. Jesus is ready. I’ve seen it time and again.”

With a chuckle, she added, “And if you’ve got a spirit of infirmity trying to mess with you, don’t worry. We’ll kick it out. Just like we did with Eve.”

The congregation laughed one more time, but there was a sense of anticipation in the air.

Julie felt a warmth in her heart. Humor, faith, and healing had blended in this service, and she knew lives were already being transformed. As the crowd filed out, she couldn’t wait for the next meeting, knowing that God was far from finished.