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It's More Than Our Campaign...

  • By President Matt Proctor
  • Published 10 01, 2021
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READY TO GO: IT鈥橲 MORE THAN OUR CAMPAIGN鈥擨T鈥橲 OUR CALLING

I love watching heroes-in-the-making.

Of course, I always wanted to be a hero-in-the-making. As a child, I was profoundly unheroic, a glasses-wearing nerdy kid with pencil-thin arms and a paper-thin chest. Do you remember the old TV show Family Matters? I was a white Steve Urkel.

But when Superman swooped into the theaters (the 1978 Christopher Reeve classic), my eight-year-old imagination was captured! I, too, wanted to fly like the Man of Steel, bend iron bars with my bare hands, and watch bullets bounce off my massive Kryptonian chest. Mostly, I wanted pectorals big enough to handle that giant red S. At age eight, my chest could only handle skinny letters like a lowercase l or i.*

Alas, I never became that hero, so instead I watched others become heroic. I tuned in to the TV show Smallville as young Clark Kent gradually came of age and donned the cape. I watched Young Indiana Jones to follow the formation of the future Nazi-fighter and Young Sherlock Holmes to see a teenage stripling slowly become the super sleuth.

Over twelve years and twenty-some films, Marvel Studios told the story of a band of heroes鈥攖he Avengers鈥攚ho battle evil to save the world. But here鈥檚 what I kept going to the theater to watch: each hero struggling to become who they were meant to be.

If you鈥檝e seen the movies, you know: Peter Parker grows from tentative teenager to seasoned Spiderman. Black Widow transforms from deceptive spy to loyal leader. Thor starts as arrogant heir to become humbled teammate. Bruce Banner moves from conflicted Jekyll-and-Hyde to integrated Professor Hulk, and Tony Stark matures from selfish playboy into sacrificial protector.

Those movies made over $20 billion, so maybe I鈥檓 not the only one who likes watching heroes-in-the-making.

KINGDOM WORKERS UNDER CONSTRUCTION

Marvel, of course, borrowed their plot from an older, truer tale. The New Testament tells the story of Jesus, but it also tells of a band of heroes鈥攖he Apostles鈥攚ho battle evil to save the world. In Acts 2, we see them filled with supernatural power to begin preaching in Jerusalem, driving back the kingdom of darkness.

Eventually (church tradition tells us) that battle takes Philip to North Africa, Thomas to India, Matthew to Iran, Andrew to 鈥渢he land of the man-eaters鈥 in Russia, John to Asia Minor, Paul to Greece, and Peter to Rome. They go with the gospel on their lips and the Spirit in their hearts, and ultimately they 鈥渢urn the world upside down.鈥 (Acts 17:6)

But first, each had his own life turned upside down.

The recent television series The Chosen tells the story of Christ, but part of the series鈥 power is its portrayal of the apostles鈥 transformation. The famous followers aren鈥檛 yet ready for their world-changing task, so Jesus shepherds and shapes them. We watch as:

  • James and John learn to let go of ethnic prejudice to see all races through Jesus鈥 eyes.
  • Simon the Zealot lays aside political fervor to embrace Jesus鈥 mission.
  • Mary Magdalene overcomes past trauma to receive Jesus鈥 healing.
  • Matthew matures from insecure outsider to confident companion of Christ.
  • Simon Peter grows from self-trusting survivor to Jesus-trusting martyr.

Jesus spent his three-year ministry refining these future faith leaders, and every time I watch an episode of these kingdom workers under construction, I think of our students at Ozark.

This fall, we again welcomed hundreds of students who want to 鈥済o and make disciples of all nations.鈥 Over the last twenty-five years, I鈥檝e watched our students鈥攍ike the apostles themselves鈥攖ake the gospel to the globe: Kentucky and Kenya, New York and New Zealand, Boston and Beijing, Alabama and Afghanistan. I鈥檓 confident these 2021 freshmen will someday continue that world-changing mission.

But right now, they鈥檙e not ready. Like those young Galilean fishermen so long ago, they need taught, encouraged, challenged, healed, and equipped.

Aaron Brockett did.

BEFORE AND AFTER PICTURES

The Before Picture: Aaron Brockett did not want to be a preacher. A quiet, shy kid, he got Cs and Ds in high school speech, and when his youth minister asked him to pray out loud for the youth group, he refused. Why would he want to talk for a living?

But Aaron had no other plans, so when a friend invited him to Ozark, Aaron shrugged and agreed. Bible college is, as Oswald Chambers said, 鈥渨here God helps himself to lives,鈥 and during his freshman year, under a conviction from God, Aaron reluctantly accepted an invitation to preach his first sermon at a little church in Arkansas. That Sunday morning, he walked shaking to the pulpit with a 25-page manuscript in hand.

He finished the sermon in eight minutes.

When he sat down afterward, he prayed, 鈥淕od, that was the scariest thing I鈥檝e ever done. When can I do it again?鈥

The After Picture: Today, Aaron Brockett is the preacher at Traders Point Christian Church in Indianapolis, and his relevant, straightforward teaching of God鈥檚 Word is one reason the church has grown from 2,000 to over 10,000.

Our job at Ozark is to get Great Commission leaders 鈥渞eady to go,鈥 and one of the great joys of my twenty-five years has been watching 鈥渂efore鈥 pictures develop into 鈥渁fter鈥 pictures: freshmen who didn鈥檛 know the name Nicodemus later quoting all of John 3 from memory, cocky teenagers becoming humble servants, timid public speakers becoming powerful preachers, trendy mirror-checking girls becoming selfless missionaries, raw abilities becoming razor-honed gifts, stand-in-the-corner students becoming take-charge-of-the-task leaders, broken lives being healed and then healing others.

When I鈥攐ften years later鈥攙isit these graduates, I see hundreds and thousands of lives changed through their ministries, and I remember back to when they walked in as baby-faced freshmen. My eyes well with tears knowing we got to play a part in preparing them, and my heart swells with gratitude at how God is using them now to save the world.

I love watching heroes-in-the-making.

THE READY TO GO CAMPAIGN

That鈥檚 why we are publicly launching a new three-year capital campaign called 鈥淩eady to Go.鈥 The funds raised will help us get more kingdom heroes 鈥渞eady to go鈥 with the gospel to a lost world. Specifically, the campaign is funding three initiatives:

  • Student Grants ($1.7 million) We praise God that OCC is entering its eleventh straight year debt free. But the recent pandemic resulted in two smaller freshmen classes, which will affect our next few yearly budgets. These dollars will give our general fund a little extra help鈥攗nderwriting international and need-based student grants the next three years鈥to prepare those students while keeping us debt free.
  • Graduate Program Launch ($400,000) We are often contacted by those with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in another field but who have now heard God鈥檚 call to ministry. They want biblical ministry training, so in fall 2022, we are launching a graduate program to do for them what our undergraduate program does for traditional students: train them for Christian service. These dollars will help with the new program鈥檚 initial start-up costs. (Check out occ.edu/masters聽for more.)
  • Dorm Renovation ($3.8 million) Our six dorms鈥攖hree men鈥檚, three women鈥檚鈥攁re over fifty years old, and like me, they鈥檙e showing their age. So over the next several summers, these dollars will help our ongoing project of renovating these dorms with things like new plumbing, electric, HVAC, windows, bathrooms, carpet, paint, and room furniture. We want a welcoming place for students to stay as they get ready to go.

The Ready to Go campaign鈥檚 total goal is $5.9 million. The good news: by God鈥檚 grace, we already have $4.7 million committed!

In the campaign鈥檚 advance phase, many generous donors shared their excitement for Ozark鈥檚 focused vision鈥攖raining Great Commission leaders鈥攁nd shared their resources to move that mission forward.

Now as we launch the campaign鈥檚 public phase, it鈥檚 your turn. I hope you鈥檒l prayerfully consider being a part.

I never did become Superman. But during my student years at Ozark, I did get my own little taste of the hero-making process. Under teachers like Mark Scott and Wilbur Fields, Jackina Stark and J.K. Jones, Harvey Bacus and Kenny Boles, I was stretched and refined. I came in a na茂ve, shallow, sometimes-self-righteous kid. Five years later, I walked out with a humbler attitude, sharpened gifts, a deeper faith, and a strong commitment to preach the gospel.

I鈥檓 still no hero. But Ozark prepared me to play my little part in saving the world, and Katie and I joined the Ready to Go campaign so Ozark can do that for the next generation.

Will you help prepare more heroes-in-the-making?

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*Ortberg, John.聽The Life You鈥檝e Always Wanted.聽Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1997.