I’m Proud of our Graduates!
One of the wonderful blessings of teaching
future ministers is catching up with what our graduates are doing a few years
after they graduate. For a couple of
months last year I picked one a week and described what they were doing in the
kingdom of God. I just started this on a personal fling and just wrote about
whoever came to my mind that week.
Then I realized afterward that it might be
nice if the freshman in my “Introduction to pastoral Ministry” course could
read these updates to see if they could catch a glimpse of the sorts of things
they might be doing themselves in 4-5- or 8 years. So here is the first collection made in the
spring of 2010.
Jarod Osborne--soon to be pastor in Vancouver Washington
Jarod was one of those strong-silent-type students. He always seemed so
strong to me—even before I knew him well. I later discovered why he came across
this way—it was a mind set of a man with a black belt in martial arts and he
was restrained in letting that power out. That’s how Jarod was intellectually
too in my classes—he often knew the answers to questions and had deep thoughts
yet he often kept them to himself while others filled up class discussion with
shallower thoughts.
I got to know Jarod best after he spent his junior year overseas. Facing
radical culture shock, other flourishing religions and personal grief he
experienced a major crisis of faith. When he returned to IWU he was trying to
find his way again and we met often. I admired Jarod deeply as I saw him work
through recovering his faith again. He is one of my models for how to face and
recover from such a faith crisis. His strength and perseverance makes him the
go-to guy in my opinion for young men and woman facing such a collapse of
faith.
Jarod worked as a youth outreach coordinator for the Salvation Army in
Mansfield, Ohio, and has served in youth work for a United Methodist church in
New Jersey and even served as a missionary to Uganda where he found his wife
Esther. The last time I ran into Jarod was after hiking the Wind River
Mountains of Wyoming with the Kinds. Sharon and I stopped by Yellowstone for chuch Sunday morning and Jarod was the summer park chaplain
there—he preached a great sermon. (His pictiure that
morning is above).
Jarod is about to graduate from seminary. In a month or so he’ll graduate from
Princeton Theological seminary, my own alma mater. I found out this week that
he has just accepted a call to be the solo-senior pastor of the Vancouver
Wesleyan church, in Washington. District Superintendent Karl Westfall is
building up quite a cadre of pastors in that district and Jarod will be a great
addition. Jarod, I’m proud of you—you’ll make a great pastor!
Marcelo Santana
came to IWU from Puerto Rico but I didn’t get to really know him until Paul
Kind invited Marcelo along for a month of hiking on the Pacific Crest Trail.
What
a wonderful guy he turned out to be. How I came to love and admire Marcelo! He
was an intrepid hiker who never seemed to have a bad day--even though he often
fell into rivers and streams while attempting too-long jumps across the rocks.
He sang lustily on the trail so that I could hear him a half mile away, he
remembered stories and jokes from his teen years and from campus and told (and
retold) these stories until our sides split with laughter. (Picture of Marcelo
and me below)
On the IWU campus he was a whirlwind of energy, riding his skateboard into
right into the classroom or publishing a book of ideas for “Cheap Dates in
Marion” which he sold to other students who had less creativity. His papers
were always different from everyone else’s since he could dream up a dozen
different way to do the assignment that the professor
had never even never thought of.
I watched Marcelo flip for Laura Warner (who happened to be one of my favorite
Christian Education students). Laura graduated in 2002 and Marcelo (AKA "Chelo") graduated in youth ministry a year later. When
these two got married they moved to Ohio, Laura’s home state, where Laura
taught at Head Start and Marcelo worked on a farm then later at a factory
making electrical parts. But hat was not thei goal--they
were praying together that God would lead them to a church.
In October 2003, a year after Chelo’s graduation they
were called to work at Grant Wesleyan Church in Michigan. Ever since they have
been at that same church—a great church with a great senior pastor. Laura
substitute taught until their daughter Elena was born and they have recently
added a scond child, Antonio, who is now about 6
months old. I think they bought a house there too.
Laura mentors youth and young adults in the Grant church and is a youth leader
working with Marcelo who is the youth pastor/assistant pastor. Chelo is the consummate “connecter” with people—he is
virtually "omnipresent" in the community. He coaches soccer, plays
indoor soccer after school, hangs out at the skate parks, and even runs dodge
ball tournaments in the high school gym to provide a safe place for kids on
Friday nights.
Lately Chelo is really into training interns for
service and ministry—mostly high school seniors. His high school interns speak
at children’s rallies, help the elderly, do home repair projects, learn to play
instruments, and help out with local church ministries. It is an incredible
thing--he runs a program for high schoolers that rivals some post-college internship prgrams. In fact Chelo sends some
students to IWU who have more ministerial experience when they get here than
most other students have when they leave!
To connect with the
Mexican community the Grant church runs a summer soccer league--getting the
idea that Chelo likes soccer? Chelo
is also a translator in the court system along with helping the volunteers
learn Spanish. Can a Puerto Rican kid who married an Ohio girl be happy in
northern Michigan? You betcha! They love their work
and the people at Grant Wesleyan and their Senior Pastor loves them right back.
I’m proud of you Chelo & Laura!
Dave Mierau --Pastor in Goshen
Dave Mierau graduated from IWU in 2005 and is now pastor at LifeSpring Community Church, in Goshen, Indiana. It is a
very relational,
laid back church packed with mature leaders and a lot of diversity in age and
occupations including quite a few students from Goshen college
who attend. Dave’s church runs about a hundred people but he has five people on
staff. How does he pull this off? There are five staffers each at about ten
hours a week—most of them of course are bi-vocational. The staff is pretty
diverse too in terms of people's ages. Dave feels this
intergenerational-part-timers staff model has worked pretty well. He’s
energized!
I recall that Dave had a series of solid practicum experiences in college and
some great internship experiences after college before he returned to Indiana
to pastor this church. About a year ago he got married (to Kim) and they are
partners in ministry. I admire Dave’s creativity and leadership! I’m proud of you Dave!
Dustin graduated just
last year (2009) with a CM degree. When he was here he was involved at College
Wesleyan church and he especially focused on the college ministry of seven47.
He was always active in classes and his ever-present smile in classes always
made me want to continue teaching another year!
Dustin started looking for internships the summer before his final year. He
wanted to serve as an intern before launching into a full ministry position. He
found a church who said they were interested in his coming for a summer, but
they wanted someone who would consider coming back after graduation for the
possibility of filling a full time position—as a continuing full-year intern.
He took that summer internship, and sure enough he then went on staff as an
“apprentice” there after he graduated.
Dustin is at Crossroads Christian Church, a non-denominational Christian Church
in Evansville, Indiana where the weekly attendance is about 3700. The high
school ministry has 150 students at the Sunday night program and 200 students
involved in house groups on a weekly basis. The church had been without a high
school pastor for three years when Dustin joined the staff so the department
head over student ministries had been fulfilling this role. That department
head developed the plan of which he is now a part.
Dustin (with a second recent graduate of Johnson Bible College) are both in a 1 year apprenticeship where they are mentored
under the counsel of the department head (who has thirty years of youth
ministry experience). At the end of this year the church will decide if it
wants to take one or the other or both of them on as high school pastors.
There are two high school campuses they work with so each of them takes one
school. Dustin is in a school that is very open to ministries, so he is
coaching the defensive line for the varsity football team where he makes vital
contacts. Te church is seeing incredible growth in the youth ministry, and
Dustin is excited. So am I. Dustin shows how a student can leverage a summer
internship into a year-long apprenticeship which gets him wonderful experience
that leads to full time full pay work there or elsewhere. I’m proud of you Dustin!
I forgot exactly when
Tom Cochran graduated from IWU but he and Sarah are making me proud==along with
Matt Cox!
I knew Tom as a
student and I remember that he was always a steady and hard-working student—he
was always sparking his small group to work harder and can still picture him as
a “nodder”—not the kind of nodder
who nods to sleep but the kind who nods during a lecture affirming what the
teacher is saying egging me on. (I always need at least one in class!).
Last month (2/2010) Tom bit off a huge challenge. He held his first service in
a new Wesleyan church plant in Wabash, Indiana—the New Journey Community
Church. There were 123 people attending his first service at the “Honeywell
center” there. I’m thrilled! I’ve been involved with two church plants myself
as a “layman” and getting more than a hundred people out for the first service
is a gigantic accomplishment!
Kudos to Tom and Sarah—and to Matt Cox who is also helping out on staff! A
number of people already become Christians as a result of their work in Wabash,
several in the very first service. A lot of the students I teach want to plant
churches so I’m especially happy to tell them about graduates like Tom Cochran
who didn’t just dream but actually did it! If you want to hear Tom on this new
church, see his video here. I’m proud of you Tom! People
like you make teaching ministry student worth it all!
Eddie Smith was impossible to miss when he was in a class. His energy,
craziness and active participation made all his professors look forward
to him. He was a fantastic note-taker. I remember one time his note-taking got
him in trouble with Bud Bence. Dr. Bence noticed that one of his 7:50 classes had simply “gone
dead.” Students seemed glazed over and few even took any notes. They listened
but when he said something obviously important nobody wrote it down. It shook Bence—he thought maybe he had lost his magical touch. Then
he discovered that Eddie Smith was taking perfect notes each day and emailing
them to the rest of the class. Upon getting the notes the rest of the class
realized they’d never be able to capture Bence as
well as Eddie did so they just checked out and waited for their email from
Eddie. (I think Bence talked him out of that, but if
I recall correctly he persuaded Eddie to give HIM a copy of the notes—who
knows, maybe he’s using Eddie’s notes now in his lectures!
Eddie graduated in 2001 and began his ministry as a sort of intern at the
Wesleyan Headquarters in the Evangelism & Church Growth department under
(now a General Superintendent) Jerry Pence. Then he spent two years as the
youth pastor at Mt. Zion Wesleyan Church in North Carolina before moving to IWU’s sister school, Southern Wesleyan University where he
has worked in admissions since 2004. I’ve always sort of seen Eddie as a church
planter—he has just the sort of personality that attracts people and he has
always been able to “call out” people, which is why he’s been good at
admissions I bet. It has been nine years since Eddie graduated and every one of
his profs still remember him well. That’s saying
something—after all since Eddie graduated from IWU we have had more than a
thousand students pass through the Religion Division (now “School of Theology
and Ministry”). But if you know Eddie that’s not hard to
imagine. Eddie we are
all proud of you!
Kelsi
Adkins had a double major at IWU (Christians Education & Worship) and was
always alert and full of energy in her classes. We all missed her when she
graduated in 2008. When she was in college she did
her practicum work at Hanfield UM church and also
worked in her home church over a couple summer in Chillicothe, Ohio. When she
graduated she moved to Indianapolis where she got an apartment with Kelly Reynen. With her CE degree she passed the tests and becmae a teacher in Indianapolis Schools and also did some
preaching on the side as she worked on her Master’s degree at Marian College in
Indy and she juggled several options for her life’s calling.
When Kelsi moved to Indy she started attending Grace
Pointe Church of the Nazarene on the west side. She had been attending there
for a little over a year when the pastor preached a sermon where he mentioned
about the need for our church to hire a children’s pastor. This church had
never had one before, even though the church is a fairly good size. In that
service Kelsi heard the Lord spoke to her about this
opportunity. So she approached the pastor immediately after that service. So
this CE-Worship graduate who was now a public school teacher interviewed with
the board and got a unanimous vote.
That was last fall. She started in her full time church ministry job in
December, 2009. Her title: “Pastor of Families with Children.” As soon as she
finishes her Master’s degree this May she will begin the credentials process
for ministry in the Church of the Nazarene
Kelsi is one of those students who finally settled
her call to the ministry after graduation, though she sensed it before. As a
single woman in ministry she has faced some challenges. Just six weeks after
she took over as a pastor a family of seven left the church because the husband
refused to be under her leadership in the children’s department since she was a
woman. But she has an incredibly supportive and mentoring senior pastor who
takes such things in stride. Here’s the way she puts it: “I won’t sugarcoat things,
but I can say that denying the call would be much worse than braving the
opposition.” Kelsi I’m proud of you!
Craig Coe is the
Executive Pastor at Cherry Creek Wesleyan Church in Colorado.
He graduated from IWU in 2002 and his first job was in Flatland Indiana with
IWU Admissions. As a student he did all of his practicum courses at Lakeview
Church in Marion —one each with the senior pastor, assistant pastor, college
pastor and music pastor so he could see all aspects of the work—a great idea.
A year before Craig graduated he joined a church planting team planning to
launch a church two years later, in 2004—also a great idea. Craig and his wife
He and his wife (Priscilla Ruder Coe) moved to Colorado in starting out as
Pastor of Discipleship at the new “Summit Church.” He led the small groups,
special classes and seminars, along with leading the marketing and technology
aspects in the new church plant.
When the lead pastor of Summit church left in 2006 Craig took on the role of
lead pastor. He’s a good example of someone who was happy to be a staff pastor
and wasn’t that interested in taking on the mental and emotional challenges of
being a lead pastor—but when God and the church called him to it, he stepped up
for the next three years.
Later two Wesleyan churches merged (Summit Church and Cherry Creek) and Craig
became the executive pastor of the merged church. As exec pastor he oversees
the financial and organizational structures of the church and also leads the
preschool-daycare. He coordinates the weekend service and is leads the church’s
marketing too. Of course he does other things all pastors do, like leading a
small group for young families.
I’m jealous of Craig because he lives in my favorite state. I’ve been trying to
get IWU to move to Colorado but so far I’ve been unsuccessful—we’ve built too
many new buildings in Indiana I guess. But I do visit Colorado! A few years ago
Jeanie Argot, Burt & Mason Webb, and I hiked a section of the Continental
Divide and Colorado Trail and Craig picked us up at the Denver airport and
dropped us off up in the mountains for our three week trek. We almost persuaded
Craig to just leave the car at the road and join us!
One of Craig’s good friends is Nathan Lamb—who now works at Wesley Seminary
here in Marion. So every time I see Nathan I remember Craig and Priscilla.
Craig and Priscilla have some kids but I forgot how many—they are great parents
(I hear from Melissa “Rudy” who is always talking about her sister). I still
remember Craig form classes—but more so, I picture him in Colorado where I
always dreamed of planting a church myself! Thanks for living my dream for me!
Craig, you bring great meaning to my life and I’m proud of you!
Steve Abel graduated almost five years ago, in 2005. I think maybe I was the
first person he "interviewed" when he was decising
to come to IWU. That was back when we were first founding the worship
major--and I was teaching all the worship courses.
I loved having Steve
in classes because he was always in tune with whatever was being
taught—smiling, nodding, and “getting it.” It least he always looked like that
to me! He was very active as a student in ministry—not waiting until he
graduated to get involved. Steve did his practicum at Eagle Church in
Indianapolis (where Ian Swyers is now--see entry
below). Amber, his wife took a bunch of my classes too—she was always a happy
student who reliably offered some clever and sometimes irreverent comment before,
during and after classes. Wheneve I saw the printout
of students and saw her name I knew it was going to be a fun class. Amber was
always freezing at IWU—invaribly bringing a blanket
to class to curl up in!
When
they got married I expected Amber to persuade Steve to move someplace warm, but
they went to serve at the Sidney Ohio First United Methodist Church. He worked
there for almost 2 years when Heritage Wesleyan Church in the Quad cities
snatched him . I think Mark Schmerse
who worked at Heritage at the time contacted Steve first and linked up the
church and Stave (more about Mark in a previous entry here). That reminds me
how networking is important—you never know which of your former college buddies
might hook you up with your next church. Steve is the worship pastor at
Heritage church now. Steve and Amber now have a little boy, Lincoln.
I think Steve was instrumental in beginning the new Heritage "Bettendorf
venue" (their 2nd Campus) initially, though now it is led by the campus
pastor for Bettendorf. He still selects all music for the campuses except his
youth worship leaders select their own music for youth programming. Steve is a
genius at event planning and plays a major role in the creative planning
process and stage design for the large Christmas and Easter events.
When Styeve was a student he led worship too—and
that’s exactly what he does—leads
others in worship. It is not a watch-Steve-sing performance but
worshipping God together as Steve "prompts." Every time I have been
in a service led by Steve he has helped me connect with God. I loved Steve and
Amber when they were students and I was proud of them then. Still am! I’m proud of you Steve and Amber!
Ian Swyers and his wife Danielle graduated 2006. Ian was a doule major--Business Administarion
and Christian Ministry. I had Ian as a freshman first, then several times
later. As a student he worked at College Wesleyan Church during the school year
and in the summers he worked at Skyline Wesleyan in California and Spring Lake
Wesleyan in Michigan.
When Ian and Dannnielle graduated he went to
Indianapolis to work with Clint Ussher as a
Co-Student Pastor of 6-12 grades at Eagle Church (Christian & Missionary
Alliance). Two years later Clint left for Princeton Seminary and Ian took over
as the Student Pastor for grades 5-12 He’s been at Eagle Church for about 4
years now.
As “Student Ministry Pastor” Ian has about 130 students who regularly attend
his various weekly programs. Danielle works with the youth ministry too as
small group leader, program planning, game leader, retreat and trips leader,
and speaker. She works a “day job” too as an executive assistant for H.C.
Wilson in Wesleyan Global Partners
Ian was gifted high school student himself—he was known as a strong Christian
in a public high school. Now he leads other teens to become this sort of
witness in their own schools. He is creative, industrous
and a great youth speaker. He cruises through our campus a few times a year
interviewing students to join him as interns. I always urge stuents
to link up—he is a master at youth ministry and has lots to teach. I’m proud of Ian and Danielle.
Zach & Becca Coffin are a double-header
couple that graduated in 2007—almost three years ago. I had each in numerous
classes before they found each other and had them both in one class after they
became a couple. Zach was a life-long Baptist and Becca
was a Wesleyan from southern Ohio. They are one of those couples professors hope will find each other—and sometimes we “help”
make that happen.
When
Zach was a student he worked faithfull with the youth
at a local Baptist church of 1200. I watched his wise approach to ministry even
when he was a student and things didn’t go well in his church. The church of
1200 faced troubles that are not worthy of mentioning here but as a result its
attendance dropped to 800 people, then to 600—it was not a pretty sight. As the
church crumbled they turned to Zach to lead the children’s ministry then he
became the interim youth pastor for a year holding things together. After he
graduated the church eventually split.
Upon graduation Zach and his new wife Becca went
south—to an independent Presbyterian-ish Community
Church that was facing even worse complications that are beyond mentioning
here. Yet as youth pastor he led the ministry from 15 to 50 in the following 2
½ years. Zach and I emailed often while he was building a youth ministry in a
“difficult situation.” Zach always had such a delightful attitude—never
judgmental, never critical, and always took the long view for the sake of the
church—not his own “career.”
So when I heard this fall that Zach and Becca were
going to Spring Lake Wesleyan church in Michigan I knew they had got a winner.
How well things turned out! Here was a mature guy getting a job at mature
church. I like Spring Lake church almost as much as I like Zach and Becca! At Spring Lake Zach is th Pastor of Student Ministry and runs all middle
school and high school ministries—about 150 students. He has two other paid
staff members and about 40 volunteer leaders helping him. Zach is in a sense
the “senior pastor of student ministries.”
About half of the students I teach are Wesleyans. The other
half includes
Methodists, Baptists, Nazarenes, Independents, Brethren, and even an occasional
Roman Catholic. It is OK with me when these students return to their
home denomination to serve and minister. But I am always delighted when a
Baptist or Nazarene graduate winds up becoming a Wesleyan. I hope that’s not
naughty of me but I admit it. I don’t try to “convert” them (Zach will testify
to that) but when it happens I am always tickled inside.
Zach and Becca faced some pretty difficult ministry
situations—situations that cold have made them quit or give up. But they
persevered and kept pouring their time into their ministry and didn’t let the
messy church situation deflate their motivation. They are examples to me and my
students that they might not get an ideal church situation when they graduate…
they might even get a really messy one… but here’s Zach and Becca’s
take on it all: “We might find ourselves somewhere really messy but we can
never find ourselves someplace where we can’t be used.” God has consistently
used this couple who Love God and each other. I expect to hear lots more about
them in the future. I’m Proud
of Zach and Becca Coffin!
Austin Bonds escaped a life of drug and alcohol abuse and overcame great odds
to wind up today as a one of the leaders working with needy people in New York city.
Austin graduated almost ten years ago—in 2001 as a youth ministry &
recreation Management major. After a short stint in Arkansas where his
wife, Darcy got a job but Austin wasn’t able to find a church or job fit and
simply did odd jobs while looking. Finally he took a volunteer youth Pastor
position. Before long Austin and Darcy moved back to Marion
where he volunteered at College Church. His specialty was picking up the
"non-church kids," ministering to them then taking them back home. He
then worked with Fairmount Wesleyan for a couple of years where Jason Denniston now works.
Finally, six year after graduation his chance to do what he dreamed of came.
Austin linked up with New York City Relief (http://www.nycr.org/
) where he is the Director of Outreach. NYCR is an interdenominational para-church ministry that utilizes an old school Bus to
bring the good news and resources to the areas in most need in the metro NYC
area. They have a budget of about a million dollars a year and serve 10
locations a week. On these visits Austin’s busses serve soup, bread, and hot
chocolate to over 2,000 people weekly. The food brings the people in but
actually they serve a do9uble portion: food and life transformation. They are a
bridge to other helping ministries and agencies—more than 600 others—from food
pantries to Christian based drug rehab.
Austin gets to do what he dreamed of doing—mobilizing the church for God's
social justice system. He personally leads the outreach at two different
locations each week along with serving as part of the leadership team that
makes decisions for the organization.
Though Austin’s ministry is non-denominational he stays connected to his home
denomination, the Wesleyan Church and some day I expect he will take a church
again or maybe work in one of the many justice and mercy programs Wesleyan
churches are now launching. If he does it would be our win—he is a great guy
and Darcy and their three kids are a wonderful family. (I’m not trying to steal
you away from NYCR, Austin… well, not right away ;-) Austin is one of the
growing number of IWU grads who have a heart for the
needy—like Jesus.
I like it that Austin didn’t give up. He is a great model of someone who had a
hard time finding his place on graduation, cobbling together work as a home
inspector, volunteer youth worker, pert time youth worker, before landing work
in the NYCR. He never gave up on his calling and I admire him for that. I’m proud of you Austin!
I never actually had Adam
(or his wife Becky) in class, but I count Adam as one of my joys because we
spent so many hours when he was
a student drinking coffee together, reading all of Steinbeck’s East of Eden together and hiking
the Knobstone Trail in Indiana .
He reminds me of the joy I sometimes derive from students who never sit in any
of my courses.
Adam was a Biology & International & Community Development major so he
had most of his classes with my friends, Burt Webb, Norman Wilson, Steve
Pettis, and Ken Schenck. I got to know him best when
I helped run support when he and a few other students tried to hike the 44 mile
Knobstone Trail (20,000’ of elevation gain/loss) in
one 24 hour period—and he made it in less than 18 hours!
Adam and Becky are so committed to helping the needy they bring conviction to
me. When Adam graduated he and Becky moved to the inner city of Marion and
worked at St Martin Community Center where he worked in the food pantry, soup
kitchen, thrift store for more than a year. He became the assistant director of
this widely known caring ministry.
Adam is not only sensitive to the poor but is committed to careful stewardship
of the environment too. One time we had Adam and Becky over for dinner and
afterward he gently corrected my extravagant waste of using incandescent
lights—even offering to buy some on his meager salary for me to replace my
bulbs. “Coach, I’m disappointed, you should know better.” Rightly subdued, I
went out and replaced all my bulbs the following week. In a way Adam was my mentor in reducing my carbon
footprint.
It was no surprise to me last summer when Adam and Becky joined up with
Word-made-flesh and went to Al Alto, Bolivia http://www.wordmadeflesh.org/bolivia/about/
They now work in a hospitality center for women in
prostitution. They visit the brothels regularly and invite women to the center,
where they offer a doctor, serve meals, along with therapy/counseling. Soon
they will be launching an exporting business making purses as an alternative
employment. I follow Adam and Beck on their blog: http://boliving.blogspot.com/
Adam now lives at a higher elevation than I have ever climbed in my life! (I
understand he now has zero-degree sleeping bag even--probably a low-footprint
one!) They live in an ecumenical community that "is called and committed to serve Jesus among
the most vulnerable of the world’s poor. This calling is realized as a
prophetic ministry for, and an incarnational,
holistic mission among the poor. We focus our energy to make Jesus known among
the poor while reconciling the church with the poor."
I admire Adam and Becky and am proud to consider him as one of my great joys.
They are making a difference among the poor and abused in the world—like Jesus
did. I’m proud of you Adam and
Becky!
Julie Collins was one
of those stand-out ministerial students every professor knew was going to make
an impact. I had her in the first introductory ministerial course and a bunch
of courses after that. She was brilliant and could have gotten a free ride to
just about
any grad school or seminary in the country. But Julie felt too called to the
local church to go one just yet for further education—she wanted to be in local
church ministry—and right away. Julie was a Methodist when she came to IWU but
when she graduated she became a Wesleyan and went on staff at Spring Lake
Wesleyan Church (Michigan) where she became a model of what a woman can do as a
youth pastor. Being a woman youth pastor is sometimes a harder glass ceiling”
to break than becoming a woman senior pastor or General Superintendent. There
are few areas of ministry where women ministers have a harder time “breaking
in” than youth ministry. But she did it and did it well—even though she hardly
appeared to be much older than the teens she led.
After several years as a youth pastor Julie felt led to enter what some of us
had expected all along she would do—she became a single-woman-church planter!
Julie moved to Ft. Collins, Colorado last summer and is now planting a new
Wesleyan church there. She has assembled a team including Joel Stone, Brandon
and Kristen Vanderkolk and maybe Katie and Jamie
Fuller. Everyone on the team are all getting jobs so
they can integrate into the community and pour money back into the church.
She hasn’t started public services yet but in November she launched her “party
strategy” of holding weekly parties every Tuesday for the sole purpose of
developing community and enjoying life with people they are collecting. Next
she started a weekly Bible Study. The “party strategy” intrigues me… and it
really fits what many younger folk (and some of us older folk) see as the need
in the church for more intimacy and friendship. I bet it is easier for
non-churched people to accept an invitation to a “party” than to a church
service. How clever!
A larger core group is now developing out of those parties. At this point
Julie’s team is looking toward a starting with a house church model which they
feel better fits the Ft. Collins culture. She is developing then a monthly
gathering of all the house churches. Her philosophical approach is heavily
rooted in Ephesians 4—the ministerial team’s job is to equip the people to be ministers.
As you might expect form her generation the approach is hyper-relational as
hope to become a church that “does life together.”
About 40% of the students I teach are women called to ministry. They are
passionate about the church and feel a clear call to the ministry. Yet they
hear from some that because they are a woman they are deceived—for a woman
cannot be called to the ministry. Yet they persevere hoping there will be a
place for them some day. Julie’s example gives them hope. I am full of joy
because of people like Julie Collins—a model church planter for a generation! I'm proud of you Julie!
Aaron Cloud was one of
those quiet students who gently participated in class and seldom attracted attention
to himself. I had Aaron in three classes, LCE, Adult CE and leadership. He
graduated in 2008 and is now in IWU's seminary
program.
Aaron
spent his first year after graduation as an isolated unmarried solo pastor at
Davis Wesleyan Church here in Indiana. I trembled a bit when he went because I
know solo pastoring can be isolated and lonely work even for a young married
couple, let alone for a single guy. But Aaron stuck with developing friendships
and loving the people. Aaron has a great heart of compassion and developed
quite an effective ministry at Davis Wesleyan to the poor and to widows. That
is the kind of thing Aaron does--love people like Jesus loved.
Taking a small church right out of college dumps a graduate into the deep end
of the pool. Aaron discovered that in his first year. No college course can
fully prepare a 22 year old to minister to a Father who just lost his son in a
tragic train accident. Aaron survived and that man actually eventually became a
Christian and Aaron baptized him.
Aaron has always had a burden for the poor, neglected and marginalized. I
remember in his leadership class there were small groups who designed church
plants—as an example of the sort of leadership-management things a minister
would do. His group designed a church for the poor in Marion—Aaron was even
tempted at the time to launch out and actually plant that church! So it is no
surprise to me that Aaron (with his new wife—they get married in a few weeks)
are headed off soon to pour their lives into work with abused, neglected, and
abandoned children in Chicago. On weekends he will be preaching around the
Chicago area so if you are nearby I hope you will invite him to your church—you
won’t be disappointed with his compassionate and tender sermons that will bring
a tear to your eye and a lump in your throat.
Aaron is one of the increasing numbers of the young people I get to teach who
are willing to put their life where their mouth is. It is easy to say you have
compassion for the poor, or even open a food pantry at a subburban
church. But Aaron plans to do mroe than that--he
plans to live with the poor. Rather than just tossing a few coins to Dives
while passing by, or just taking a one-week tourist-ministry trip to take
pictures of himself with the poor, Aaron is willing to go down in the gutter
and live with the poor
and anguished—learning from them and loving them where they are.
I admire Aaron because
he reminds me of Jesus. It is what makes my teaching worthwhile. —Aaron is my
joy and crown. I'm proud of
you Aaron!
Christy Hontz Lipscomb graduated in 1998—a
bit more than a decade ago but I can never forget her participation in my
classes. She was always one of those students who clearly registered the
effectiveness (or failure) of my teaching on her face--and right away!
When I was making sense I got nods and a smile; when I was garbled, I saw
confused frowns and I would try to teach my way out of the ditch until I got a
nod again! Christy made me a better teacher—she was an instant visual
monitoring device in my classroom--if Christy was nodding I knew was on track.
Christy graduated from IWU, married Adam Lipscomb and after a stint at a church
in Michigan they went to Asbury Seminary together then planted city-view
Wesleyan church in Grand Rapids Michigan together where they carry on an
extensive city ministry as co-pastors.
Christy and Adam are my model for ministry couples in
my classes who are looking toward co-pastoring. They each work about 30 hours a
week. They share parenting responsibilities and pastoring responsibilities so
for them, "co-pastoring means co-parenting." This shared schedule
allows them ample time to be home with their two sons, Jude, 3 and Elijah, 1.
Christy preaches about 75% of the time, leads the Sunday morning system
(preaching, schedule, topics, preachers, overseeing the worship leader). She
also heads up the Discipleship, Ministry, Leadership system and Administration.
Adam leads other “systems” including the Strategic, Evangelism, Assimilation,
and Stewardship systems
In a nutshell, Christy focuses mostly on running the inner life of the church
& Adam does more of the visionary/apostolic/evangelism work of connecting
with the community. They’ve even explored the idea of Christy taking on more
responsibility at City Life and Adam moving away from City Life a bit to plant
another church elsewhere in our city. But that’s not an immediate possibility.
Christy is a disciplined minister who runs her life on a schedule. I saw this
in college and see it now in her weekly routine. On Mondays she does initial
sermon prep, administrative clean-up & delegation for the coming week and
meets with her worship leader. On Tuesdays she digs in for the really heavy
sermon prep then prepared Wednesday for their midweek Bible study and meets
again with the worship leader. Thursdays is given to additional sermon prep and
a staff meeting along with miscellaneous projects (which includes serving part
time (10 hours per month) at the West Michigan
District Office as an Assistant DS). As an assistant DS her job is to bring
attention to social justice efforts in the district, and to women in ministry.
Friday is her day off and both Adam and Christy observe their day off
“legalistically” by denying (for that day) any church problems. On Saturday
night by 6 p.m. they both shut themselves off to focus on Sunday.
I love it that Christy loves to preach. Anyone who heard Christy at the last
Wesleyan General Conference understands how good she is. I love it especially because
preaching is a Waterloo of sorts for many of my women ministerial students.
They want to go into the ministry and do church work as a life’s calling, but
when it comes to preaching they sometimes demur—preferring the “let the guys do
it.” In my opinion this is one of the greatest barriers for these women in
ministry, and Christy is a great model here so I often tell about her in my
classes.
Christy serves an inner city congregation where she focuses on the marginal in
society. She prepares sermons just as she would if she were speaking to a
thousand suburbanites. I love it that Christy and Adam love the church. I doubt
they will ever enter a para-church ministry even
though it would be far more comfortable for them. They are just too in love
with local church ministry for that.
Christy is the sort of past student I rejoice in—even more then ten years after
she graduated from IWU. —Christy is my
joy and crown. I'm
proud of you Christy!
When Jared Bell was a
student a few years back he helped lead the college service at Lakeview Church,
and wound up in his senior year doing his preaching practicum at Westminster
Presbyterian here in Marion.
He graduated from IWU in 2005. Jared is now a youth pastor in a Wesleyan Church
in Kernersville, North Carolina. He is married to Becky Sievers
Bell and they just had their baby girl this week.
While Jared is from San Diego, he has adapted well to the land of sweet tea and
biscuits. He’s one of those youth pastors with strict office hours every
morning. He spends the afternoons making phone calls, visiting people, and
teaching free guitar lessons. Jared is a master at connecting with people. He
is no one-man-show though—he has built a strong team of volunteers that
releases him to build relationships, preach & teach and develop the team.
I fondly remember how hard Jared worked in my classes and I’m proud of how he
works so hard in ministry today—Jared is my joy
and crown. I'm proud of you Jared!
Lynn Payne was
an atheist for the first 16 years of her life.
She had never been to church until a friend invited her to youth group at
Lakeview Church in Marion, Indiana. As she attended youth group for the next
several months the youth pastor and his wife (Brandon and Jennifer Bruce)
invested in Lynn’s life and she hungered to know Jesus. She was saved at a
youth group event.
The Bruces mentored Lynn for several years. Lynn was
a senior in high school when she felt the Lord calling her into full time
ministry as a children's minister. Lynn came to IWU to get a degree in
children's ministry. She knew how to work hard as a student and how to connect
with professors as mentors. I was one of those professors who had the privilege
of having Lynn in class.
Lynn is a can-do person.
When she was flying for an interview at First Wesleyan Church in Tuscaloosa,
Alabama her flight was cancelled half way there. Lynn didn’t whine or blame the
airlines. She simply searched for and found another stranded flyer and rented a
car together and showed up on time for her interview anyway! That’s the sort of
can-do spirit one expects of a job applicant.
She got the job
and has been in charge of Children’s ministries at the church for about a year and
a half already. Four of the seven pastors are IWU grads so she gets to work
with other IWU alums. Lynn always did “above and beyond” work in every class I
had her in…and she is still doing that in her work at the Tuscaloosa. She’s
doing a great job and I’m proud of her. She is my “joy and crown.”
I’ve walked
more miles with Mark Schmerse than anyone
else--including my wife or Burt Webb. We've hiked
from a few days on Indiana’s
40 mile Knobstone Trail all the way to several months
hiking together 1100 miles on the Pacific Crest Trail from Canada to Mt Shasta
in California. Mark is a great friend and fellow backpacker.
But what makes me rejoice the most about Mark is not the miles we’ve logged
together but Mark’s more important trek as pastor of the Mountain View Wesleyan Church in
Aumsville, Oregon.
It’s a nice twist that the church he now pastors is called “Mountain View.” Mark
preaches there every week and sometimes I ask him what he preached about. I
love hearing about sermons my former students preached. When I read them they
minister to me and I am strengthened spiritually. Mark’s church is a solid
congregation committed to love God and reach others and I love hearing about
his church—maybe because it reminds me of the happy years when Sharon and I
were pastor of “ordinary churches” in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. I’m so proud
of Mark & Jess! Nothing brings me greater joy than to hear of former
students slugging it out on the Long Trail of pastoring a church. Mark &
Jess are my joy and crown.
------------------------------------------------------
Sorry for leaving so
many out here so far—I just randomly think of someone each week… but I’m proud
of you ALL! You make my life worthwhile!
THANKS t all my former students for slugging away in ministry every week—God sees!
Drop me a note from time to time and let
me know what you’re doing—it make my heart glad!