A Message from the Pastor:
Spring is Near
The winter had not been a hard one. The weather has been rainy, but not extremely cold. The hard part of this winter has been the wars. The war in Israel and the Gaza strip. Many lives have been taken, including children. Families have been devastated. The war in Ukraine where tens of thousands have lost their lives. The landscape has been turned into rubble. And we ask ourselves the unanswerable question, why? Is it in the name of power and control? Is it in the name of greed? Is it in the name of religion?
Is it a holy war? Personally, I have never understood that last question. One thing I do know, war destroys. Destroys lives, families, friends, and neighbors, destroys the land where the folks live, the structures that they have built. Destroys hope!
Spring is near and we look forward to celebrating the Resurrection of our Lord, Jesus the Christ. And as we celebrate lets us remember the words of Jesus as He began His ministry. He had made his home in Capernaum and He began to preach, “Repent, for the Kingdom of Heaven has come near.”
It is a fact that the Resurrection brings life! The Resurrection of Jesus offers to us and all of humankind a road through which repentance and forgiveness and salvation may be received. It is in His resurrection that newness of life is given to all who believe. It is in His resurrection that life can be rebuilt. Would it not be wonderful if all the leaders would come to the Cross of Jesus and repent, because they had seen the nearest of the Kingdom of Heaven, the nearest of Jesus the Christ.
Could we hear the heavenly choir singing Hallelujah: “Hosanna in the highest heaven, Blessed is the one who comes in the name of the Lord” when the peace of Christ would prevail in this world? The world created by and for the One and Only true God! James, the brother of Jesus, wrote “Draw near to God and He will draw near to you.” Let us draw near as the buds of spring begin to blossom and the birds of the air begin to sing and chirp. May we all listen to the call of the Holy Spirit each day.
In His Service
Pastor Mark
Meet the Pastor,
Rev. Mark Stephens
When I was 9 years old, my mother looked me straight in the eye and said, “You’ll be a preacher someday.” I laughed it off. How could I know she could see the future?
It took almost four decades for my mother’s prediction to come true. On a visit to a retirement center where I was offering tax preparation to the residents, the director asked me to help them find a preacher for their chapel. I was friends with the minister at my church, so I asked him to give a service. He did, but afterwards, he turned to me and said, “The chapel service is yours. You take it.” That was in 1994, the beginning of my ministry. Two years later I was asked to take on the ministry of a small church in Duplin County, N.C. I stayed there for nine years, and while serving, I also finished my formal studies to become ordained in the United Methodist Church.
In 2005 I was asked to come back to my home church in Durham, N.C., to minister to a small congregation of about 60, down from the 600 it boasted in its heyday as a metropolitan church. But it is growing.
Being a pastor has always been my part-time vocation. My full-time job has always been as a CPA. However, I didn’t get into accounting in the usual way, either. I took a detour. My home life was complicated. The solution my dad and I decided on was for me to quit high school and join the Navy, where I trained to be a storekeeper. My job required me to maintain ledgers, order supplies, and keep the budget in line. It reminded me of the tax work my dad used to do as a sideline to farming tobacco and working as an X-ray technician.
The Navy and the Vietnam War caused me to grow up. I finished my GED and decided to go to college when I finished my military stint. Unfortunately, North Carolina state schools did not accept a GED, so I begged my way into Elon College, a small private school, where an accounting professor (a retired Navy captain) pushed me toward an accounting curriculum; it was a good fit. I liked Elon, but my monthly VA allowance of $100 wasn’t enough to pay for private tuition. Success at Elon, however, qualified me to transfer to Pembroke State University during my second year.
After graduating from Pembroke and passing the CPA exam (on my first try!), I took a job with a local CPA firm, where I worked for several years. Eager to advance, I asked about partnership opportunities within the firm. I was told I would never qualify for partnership with that firm. That turndown was incentive for me to go out on my own and prove myself.
One of my first clients was a real estate developer who was being investigated by the IRS. A partner at my former firm heard I had taken on the case and called me up. He said, “You can’t handle that; you don’t know enough.” I told him, “We’ll see.” I got the case settled with no taxes owed. It was a fine beginning, which has allowed me to enjoy a successful career.
I think I am the most fortunate person in the world. I am one of those guys who enjoys the pleasures and benefits of two distinct professions. With the exception of displaying my ordination papers next to my CPA certificate and having figurines of several of the disciples decorate my desk, I keep my vocations separate from one another. I suspect, though, the listening skills I have developed as a minister have helped me as a CPA, and my CPA knowledge has helped provide a sound business system for my church.
When I left my dad’s 7-acre tobacco farm more than 50 years ago, I never thought I would end up where I am today—one of three partners in a thriving practice that employs 13 team members. It’s been a long and wonderful journey.