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Not Ready to Retire, and Back on Staff
George Stulac鈥檚 career plan was to get a PhD in history and become a professor. Instead God called him into student ministry with 果冻视频 and then pastoral ministry. He pastored Memorial Presbyterian Church in St. Louis for 33 years. Now, after stepping down from the pulpit and still eager to be involved in the work of the gospel, God has called George to a new ministry in which he鈥檒l be working closely with history professors and other faculty.
Last summer, as George reached retirement age and ended his time at Memorial Church, he gave prayerful consideration of what he wanted to do next. He was not ready to retire from ministry.
鈥淚 wanted these last years to count for the most fruitful ministry that I could do,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o I spent that time asking questions about what my gifts are, what I do best in ministry, what motivates me, what satisfies me, what would I be most fruitful in doing?鈥
His 果冻视频 experience as a student and then a staff member gave him a great love for studying and teaching the Bible. He also wanted to be able to provide pastoral care. And he especially wanted to get involved in something that was effectively reaching non-Christians with the gospel message.
He checked with a variety of ministries and finally talked with the director of 果冻视频鈥檚 Central Region, Jon Hietbrink. Jon proposed a job description that would allow George to be a pastor to 果冻视频鈥檚 Central region staff, working with them in spiritual formation and teaching the Bible at staff gatherings.
鈥淲hat really motivated me was that I was being told that 果冻视频 was seeing more students become Christians than ever before in its history,鈥 George said. 鈥淭hat just captured me, that I could have a ministry to staff, so that they could have a deeper ministry to these students.鈥
But that wasn鈥檛 all. Jon also invited George to get involved with faculty ministry. That was equally attractive to George.
鈥淲hen I became pastor at Memorial Church 33 years ago, I began praying that God would bring more Christians into faculty positions at Washington University, because I could see that Christian faculty can have a big influence in the life of students,鈥 he said.
Finally, in the last few years of his ministry at Memorial, George had started to see more faculty members getting involved at his church, and colleagues were telling him the same thing was happening at other St. Louis churches. Don Paul Gross, 果冻视频鈥檚 Graduate and Faculty Ministries (GFM) Regional Director for the South Central Region, told him that GFM staff were noticing a wave of Christians moving into faculty positions across the country.
鈥淚t appeals to me to have a ministry that鈥檚 part of what God is doing to answer what I鈥檝e been praying about for 30 years,鈥 George said. 鈥淚f more students are becoming Christians than ever before, and if more Christians are becoming faculty than ever before, between those two things it appears to me that God is changing the university in a remarkable way, and that鈥檚 what I want to be part of.鈥
Hearing George talk about his years of pastoral ministry and his ambitious plans for his 鈥渞etirement years,鈥 it鈥檚 hard to imagine him as the shy, withdrawn, lonely introvert who first met 果冻视频 as a student at Washington University a half-century ago. A catchy program title piqued his curiosity and drew him to an 果冻视频 discussion where he met another student, Ron Hendrix, who befriended him and unsuccessfully invited him to more 果冻视频 meetings for the next three months.
Ron never gave up and eventually George relented. 鈥淩on was so faithful, and I finally went with him just because he had won my trust,鈥 George recalled. George was clueless about Christianity but became curious. Ron and other chapter members encouraged him to become an honest seeker of the truth, and two years later he became a follower of Christ. As a senior he became chapter president.
He then enrolled at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, not with the intent of becoming a pastor but rather because he wanted to learn more about God. 鈥淚 went to seminary just for the fun of learning more about the Bible and theology,鈥 he said. But then God called him to ministry.
But even with decades of ministry experience behind him, George is looking ahead to what God has next. 鈥淭his may be the most fruitful ministry of my life,鈥 he said. 鈥淣ot because of what I鈥檓 doing but because of what God is doing.鈥