If
Pastor Keith, the man I wrote about last week, taught me how to pastor, Wayne
taught me how to lead selflessly, and love sacrificially. Given the few minutes I had to speak, I could
in no way capture all of what Wayne meant to me, and to the church where he invested
his life, but I tried. Here is what I shared.
Not
long after I came on staff at Bethany I started meeting with Wayne for
mentorship. We met for years. In our
times together, Wayne imparted his knowledge of the church, what he had learned
about leadership, and what he was still discovering about following Jesus.
Some
of what he shared was simple and practical like: Do the hard things first,
there was no reason to be worrying about them all day long.
Some
were convictions like: Purpose over preference.
What was unique about Wayne’s leadership was he did not call people to
give up their preference, without being willing to lay down his own. No one gave
up more of their own desires during Wayne’s tenure as elder chairman than he
did.
Then
there were the things Wayne was willing to die for, like Unity. Having endured the hurt of the church split
in the early 1980’s, he never wanted the body to go through that pain
again.
Wayne
would say splits do not happen because of the congregation, but because of the
Elder board. Maintaining unity at the board level was his highest calling. I
remember planning for the construction of the Foxhoven Ministry Center. At the meeting where we first proposed the
project, one of the elders had significant reservations. We did not make a decision that night. Wayne
fully supported moving forward, but he was unwilling to run over a fellow Elder
to make it happen. After the meeting, I
asked him what we would do if the man could not bring himself to support the proposal. Wayne’s answer was emphatic and immediate,
“We will not build it.” He knew unity
was more important than getting what he wanted. He also knew as the Elder Chairman, he had to
lead by example.
Wayne’s
leadership created a very stable environment in which the staff could carry out
our calling.
Wayne
often said his job as Elder was to remove barriers for the staff. Sometimes this meant building walls in the
pastor’s office to make room for a sectary.
Sometimes it meant taking the hard meeting so the pastor would not have
to. Sometimes this meant, as Wayne would
describe it, blocking down field so the staff could move the ball. Because of Wayne’s willingness to serve the
staff in this way, he took many hits on our behalf, in the process he freed us
to do the work of ministry.
What
many may not know is how creative and funny Wayne was. He supported the church and his bride by
building many of the sets for the Children’s musicals. He built backdrops for the worship services
and made sure his house was appropriately decorated for any party which was
thrown there. Few knew the care and
creativity Wayne would put into creating a space where people could hear the
Gospel and celebrate with one another.
Sometimes, he was also roped into being the MC or doing a monologue at a
church event. He had a dry, witty sense
of humor which could fill the room with laughter
After
Wayne’s passing, someone said to me they hoped to finish as well as he
did. I smiled, remembering Wayne tell me
how he drove the bus for Bethany in the early 1970’s, bringing hundreds of
Children to Church. While they were in
Sunday School, he and some of the other drivers would skip church and go to
breakfast. I was shocked, the Godfather
of Bethany skipping church. I was also
encouraged to know this dark secret of Wayne’s past. It meant he not only finished well, but he
finished better than he started.
Maybe
you have driven by the Bethany over the past few years and seen Wayne standing
in front of the church with a hose in hand.
Taking care of the flowerbeds was anything but a demotion for Bethany’s
finest elder chairman, it was a very tangible opportunity to walk in his
father’s shoes, the man who had modeled for Wayne what it was like to lead,
serve and die to himself. His father served in leadership at Bethany at the
board level, but he would also come down on Saturday nights to water the plants
and sweep the front sidewalks.
While
Wayne was tending the flowers, he was also thinking about this church. As he tilled the soil, he prayed for the
ministry, leaders and people of Bethany.
This church and its people were always in Wayne’s thoughts and
prayers. In them, he had invested much
of his life, for to them, he had given his heart.
While Wayne will be missed, his legacy lives on in those into which he poured his life. I am thankful to have been one of those people.
While Wayne will be missed, his legacy lives on in those into which he poured his life. I am thankful to have been one of those people.
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