
I find myself somewhere completely foreign today. For seven weeks I have been serving as the Pastor of Groveport CCCU. It is a new adventure for my wife and I. While I grew up in a pastors home, I never could have prepared myself completely for the feelings, emotions, and the work of the senior pastorate. It is such a new experience for me, which is proving to be quite exhilarating. We have come up here unsure how the people of Groveport would respond to my views on ministry and my preaching. While serving as a staff pastor at my last church was rewarding and provided a great deal of experience, I find myself feeling motivated,driven, rejoicing, and terrified.
This experience reminds me so much of the time I was sitting in a dorm room at Indiana Wesleyan University and one of my friends said, "Hey, lets all go skydiving." Being the intelligent men that we were we all scheduled a weekend trip to skydive a couple hours away from campus. None of us had jumped before, and none of us were telling our parents ahead of time.
We arrived at the airstrip as the sun was about to set the night before our big jump. We got out of the cars and stood silent and watched these experienced skydivers sailing trough the breathtaking, fall sunset. We didn't know all of the risks of skydiving. We didn't know how parachute would open. We just knew we would jump and we would live (hopefully) to tell this story to our children, grandchildren, and maybe even our parents. :)
The next morning we woke with great enthusiasm and fear. We suited up and went to our extensive 5 minute training session. By the way I think they should make those last a good hour or two even if they only have 5 minutes of training, because 5 minutes was not enough time for me to feel confident about this jump. we were informed that we would be jumping from 13,000 feet up and that we would reach speeds up to 120 miles an hour. We would free fall for nearly a minute before pulling the cord. I was also informed that since I was the heaviest jumper that I would be the first one out of the plane. Great! I really had to commit to this thing. Everyone in the plane was watching me.
They opened the hatch and i leaned out of the plane and jumped. I was skydiving. The clouds were parting around my arms and I could see for miles. I felt the clouds brush my face and saw for miles. I breathed the most crisp air and saw the shoot open. As I landed It hit me. I just went skydiving.
Coming to Groveport has been like watching the jumpers the sunset the night before I cut the clouds. I see that God is wanting to do great things. Our church looks to the sky and sees what we desire to do, and who we desire so much. We see that the church is triumphant and that while we may be on the ground looking up. The time is coming.
So we wait and look, ready for God to do what he does. The restorer of broken, Hope to the hopeless, and Reviver to our church will revive us. As a pastor I see the hatch open and the clouds below. God is moving in our church. He is calling us out from the parking lot, sitting and staring at what could be and is telling us to train and get in the plane and jump.
As a pastor I feel like I could have used more the the five minute training session with this church. In six weeks i never would have thought that our attendance would have already doubled last years average. I was ready for a long on site training. God is confirming in my heart that He is reviving this church and that now is His perfect time for me to be here. I need to get in the plane lean through the hatch and dive.
Why? because the plane is full of people who desire the same thing I do. They are all watching and waiting to see if I jump. If I just stand in the hatch No one can do what they dream to do. This congregation is watching. Groveport is watching. My wife is Watching. My God is watching and waiting on me. JUMP



