When I was in high school, I surprised everyone — including myself — by deciding that I was going to become a pastor.
Until then, my career choices had all been conventional. Various types of engineering. Law. Politics. Business. But one Sunday night, I decided — without any prior thought — that God was calling me to ministry. I didn’t know why. It just felt right.
As well-meaning adults in ministry tried to direct me over the next few years, I found out that I was nothing like them. There were square hole and there were round holes in church ministry. I was a hexagonal peg that didn’t fit into any of the holes.
During my last year of college, I served on a church staff as youth minister. Each Sunday and Wednesday, I drove about 40 miles from Tuscaloosa to Carrollton Baptist Church. I taught classes to students and I preached for the congregation at times when the pastor was out of town.
The last time I preached there — at the pulpit you see above — seemed to make clear that I just wasn’t cut out for this job.

My life will matter only if I can show love and meaning to others
After 50 years of being alone and disappointed, boy finally gets girl
Creating work that I’m proud of gives me elusive feelings of joy
People who invoke ‘fairness’ generally just mean, ‘Do things my way — or else’
The love I crave seems beyond horizon, always out of my reach
Lack of specific needs and wants makes my world feel meaningless