Unlikely Successor

He was a buttoned down statesman. I was half his age, with dreadlocks and a beard. What would happen when I replaced him?

"Don't do it!"

"They are going to hate you!"

I'm grateful for honest friends. I shared what I thought God had called me to and my buddy hit me upside the head with the above warnings. Truthfully, I thought he might be right! But I went ahead anyway.

Let me rewind. I spent most of my pastoral ministry pioneering church plants in liberal U.S. cities. From age 25 to 35, I started faith communities in urban New Jersey, San Francisco, and Marin County. I loved church planting. But God was doing a work in my heart, calling me to walk once again by faith, to do something different than I had ever done.

Bill Ritchie founded Crossroads Community Church, one of the first generation of mega-churches in the Northwest. Crossroads is located in Vancouver, Washington, on the northern banks of the Columbia River across from Portland, Oregon. By the time I got to know Bill, he was an elder statesman: buttoned up and regal, a consummate pastor. His regional radio ministry ...

Subscriber access only You have reached the end of this Article Preview

To continue reading, subscribe to Christianity Today magazine. Subscribers have full digital access to CT Pastors articles.

Homepage Subscription Panel

Read These Next

From the Magazine
Paul’s Most Beloved Letter Was Entrusted to a Woman
Paul’s Most Beloved Letter Was Entrusted to a Woman
Meet Phoebe, the first interpreter of Romans.
Editor's Pick
How Codependency Hampered My Pastoral Ministry
How Codependency Hampered My Pastoral Ministry
Part of the emotional drain I felt during the pandemic came from trying to manage my members’ feelings.
close