First and foremost, as a Pastor, I want
you to KNOW "GOD LOVES YOU." I am soon to be 62 years old with two
Master's Degrees and a lot of life experience and that is the most
important thing I have learned. God loves you because that's who He
is and what He does. There's nothing you can do that will make Him
love you more or less. You can't earn it or deserve it--that's His
gift to you. What you do with your life is how you respond to His
love, how you say thank you.
Secondly, He created you for a unique
purpose--He's given you gifts and talents and experiences to prepare
you for your special part in completing the creation of His kingdom.
The path of blessing is to seek His will--to do that which He
created you and shapes you for. To use His gifts for personal gain,
to turn them to your own ends, or to just ignore them is to kill
time, to waste your life. This isn't to say your lifelong goals are
necessarily contrary to God's plan. He may well have inspired you in
the first place. We study His Word, worship Him with prayer and
praise, and share the sacraments of baptism and Holy Communion in
our search for His presence and His will in our lives.
Lastly, our church is an
active and joyful part of the body of Christ, the gathering of all
believers and our denomination is a secondary description of how and
where we fit into that eternal body. We are an energetic and
committed part of the Yelm Area Ministerium which has nine
participating congregations. We are Christians within the
Evangelical Lutheran Church of America.
Personally, I am a
second career pastor. My first MA is in Special Education focused on
adolescent emotional and behavioral disorders. I directed a
residential treatment center in Oregon, trained counselors and
provided consultation and developed evaluation systems for programs
throughout the state. I also worked directly within the Juvenile
Corrections and Children's Services Division for three years. I've
seen the myriad ways in which the sins of the fathers are visited
upon the children to the third and fourth generations.... And I've
seen how God can intervene in a family and impact and bless that
same family for thousands of generations with His love and
forgiveness and guidance. I received my Masters of Divinity from
Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary, a member of the Graduate
Theological Union, in Berkeley, California in 1988. Until my last
year I carried a dual membership between the Americal Lutheran
Church and the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod. When three major
Lutheran bodies merged and formed the ELCA in 1988 I was ordained
and called into that affiliation. I was a trail breaker in the
Missouri Synod and tend to be a sea anchor in the ELCA. I love our
Wednesday Text Studies where I get to meet with six to ten other
Lutheran pastors from our South Sound Conference to work through
God's Word for that week. It's an interesting counter-balance with
our delightful Tuesday morning Yelm Area Ministerium prayer walks
where three to six of us from different denominations walk and talk
with each other and God and pray for our extended community.
Nancy, my wife,
was a youth worker at a church in Oregon when we met. Noah is our
sixteen year old son--a blessing well worth waiting for. He is
appropriately named as he would have two of every kind of animal and
bug in our house if we let him. We live in the parsonage connected
to the church.
Here at Emanuel one of my predecessors
was called the "marrying preacher." In my three years I've gotten
the handle of the "burying preacher." We had 14 funerals in my first
twelve months and recently had four funerals in three weeks.
Strangely, God has used this ministry to help grow our church. Many
folks have come through our doors who wouldn't otherwise enter a
church and to their surprise found we offered practical good news
during a tough time in their lives and they went away feeling better
than when they came. Many came back and some brought their family
and friends. An exciting Vacation Bible School each summer has been
another effective tool for growth.
A personal ministry focus during these
last seven years has been the Cursillo/Via de Cristo/Kairos
programs. They are, along with the Road To
Emmaus and Tres Dias, intensive
four day spiritual retreats that expose candidates to the life
changing personal love of Christ in surprising and powerful ways.
Kairos is the prison arm and I am specifically involved with the
McNeil Island Correctional Center the DSHS Special Confinement
Center ; the Clallum Bay Correction Center; and occasionally
Stafford Creek. Our congregation is also supportively involved with
the Living Stones Lutheran Congregation at Shelton's Washington
Correction Center.
Some of my passions are rock and mountain
climbing, white water rafting, elk hunting and occasional fishing,
biking and hiking, a wide spectrum of reading, using technology to
enhance the communication in our relationships and worship, and
putting the blood and spark back into our country's dehydrated,
nearly flat-line language and worship. I have survived and through
God grown from the ravages of divorce, familial alcoholism, parental
suicide, and some other tragedies and I know first hand that ALL
THINGS can and do work together for good when we love and trust God
and know He loves us.