Saturday, 27 August 2011

I know what I want to be when I grow up!

There have been two vocations I have thoroughly enjoyed in my life: Working with my hands and being in full time Christian ministry.  Yet, something perplexed me as I pursued these two paths; that being in one meant that I missed the other.  I enjoyed both and have spent a number of years wondering how the two could come together in one vocation...until now!

17 years ago my life was changed at camp when I embraced God's love and plan for my life.

17 years later I am returning to camp.

I have accepted the position of Maintenance Manager at Camp Imadene, situated on the picturesque Mesachie Lake near Lake Cowichan, BC.  I will be serving alongside a multitude of magnificent people, some year-rounders and some during the summer months.  My job is to make it safe, fun and wholesome for campers and staff alike, fixing, building, plungering and picking up around the site.  The job is more than full time so I will be dependant on gracious volunteers who generously give their time and energy serving others in humble ways.

Most campers will walk through, by, on or behind something that myself and the maintenance crew have built, repaired or maintained, likely without much consideration of how much time, energy and cost the camp has committed to making their experience at camp safe, fun and wholesome.  But being behind the scenes is my thing; organizing, preparing and executing a plan with and for a team of people.  As a pastor and coach previously, this dynamic was one of the most exhilarating things I encountered and the reason why I identify with this quote:

"A leader is best when people barely know he exists, when his work is done, his aim fulfilled, they will say: we did it ourselves." -Lao Tzu


After moving every two years in the first ten years of our marriage, my wife and I are looking forward to moving to a small town on Vancouver Island and rooting ourselves there for a very long time.  I am looking forward to both the buzz of the summer months with emergency repairs, groundskeeping and janitorial duties, and then the quieter off-season months building projects, recruiting volunteers and repairing the effects of summer chaos.  Now, I'm not naive to the fact that ministry isn't a walk in the park, and how working with multiple staff, boards, volunteers and donors can be taxing on the emotional, spiritual and physical levels, and that is why, for me, this is not a job but a calling.

So after several years of bouncing around and multi-tasking career options I believe God has brought us to this place for both a good and long time! When I think about people who wake up in the morning and can't wait to get to work, this position gets my blood flowing.  And I think when people embrace what God has prepared in advance for them to do there is not only a peace, but a wholeness, a sense of shalom which permeates through their life and into others'.  It is my hope that as I serve in this capacity, others will encounter God as we labour alongside one another, building relationships and partnering with God in what He's already doing in the lives of people we have the privilege of serving.

That, my friends, is why I am more than a maintenance man.


5 comments:

  1. Paul and Rachel,
    I am very pleased for you with this call upon your lives. I have content knowing how much each of you anticipate the relocation, the geographical setting, the activities. I am encouraged by the organization, the administration and the purpose of the Camp to which you go. When it all comes together like this, you know this will be worthwhile for everyone.

    Blogging will be a good discipline as you know. So as you come off sabbatical, I am going on mine. http://www.ronunruhGPS.blogspot.com

    Oh, I have others, not so well maintained. Maybe I can give them some attention. All the best to you Paul.

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  2. Thank you Ron,
    Your GPS blog was truly a work of heart! Countless friends of both Rachel and I have benefited from your consistent and intentional chronicling of the Bayne situation. As you are now moving into a sabbatical of sorts yourself, I know a nice little property on a beautiful lake where some charming landscapes could be artistically penned :-) Blessings to you Ron!

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  3. I am so excited for you and your family Paul!! I can't wait to hear about all your new adventures. :)

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  4. You ARE more than a maintenance man. Thanks for sharing your thoughts, Paul. Wishing you blessings and thinking of your family, often!!

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  5. Paul, is there a way to make your newest blogs appear at the top of the site rather than being relegated to a greyed-out "Newer Post" at the end or hidden on the right side in the archive?

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