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The Pastor Without a Paycheck
Christianity Today ^ | 04/22/2003 | By Tim Stafford

Posted on 04/23/2003 5:14:43 AM PDT by miltonim

The Pastor Without a Paycheck
Randy Alcorn learned to live what he had preached while fleeing the wrath of abortionists and the judgment of the courts.
By Tim Stafford | posted 04/22/2003

On the first friday in May 1990, an envelope came to the door of Randy Alcorn's semi-rural home in Gresham, Oregon, east of Portland. Inside the envelope was a copy of a writ of garnishment for Alcorn's wages. The writ required Good Shepherd Church, where Alcorn was pastor of missions, to surrender a portion of his wages.

Alcorn understood instantly what lay behind the writ. In 1989 Portland police had arrested him several times for blocking the doors of several abortion clinics. One of the clinics had sued him and other "rescuers," winning a small judgment plus attorney's fees. Alcorn had refused to pay, believing it would violate his conscience to write a check to an abortion clinic.

Some time before the suit, Alcorn and his wife, Nanci, had placed all their assets in her name—house, car, and bank account. Alcorn had given away or sold the copyrights to his five published books. At a debtor's hearing he was able to state truthfully that he owned nothing of value. An opposing lawyer went so far as to ask about the gold band he was wearing on his left hand.

Alcorn held up the ring, milking the drama of the moment. "I'm not sure what it's worth today, but I paid $12.50 for it at Kmart four years ago."

Alcorn had not anticipated having his wages garnished, however. This implicated not just Alcorn's conscience, but also that of his church. If the church refused to pay, serious legal complications could follow. Many church members had grave doubts about the wisdom of Alcorn's protests. Now they were sucked into the backwash.

A quick visit to the church offered Alcorn slight relief. By some glitch no legal papers had yet reached Good Shepherd. The church office would be closed for the weekend. He had until Monday.

After a flurry of phone calls, prayers and consultations, Alcorn concluded that he had only one alternative. Sunday evening he met with the church's elders to resign his position. On the spot, they wrote him a check for the week of May he had already worked. Though he was a founding pastor of the church, though it was the only church he had ever known since seminary, though he had expected to spend the rest of his life as a pastor there, he quit his job.

On Monday morning he caught his breath and began to ask the next question: What would he do with the rest of his life?

Single-minded zeal
Alcorn is a man of passionate commitments. The son of an Oregon tavern owner, he gave himself to Christ in high school with a rare single-mindedness. At the age of 22 he joined one of his former youth pastors, Stu Weber, in launching Good Shepherd Church in the rural burg of Boring, Oregon. (The Boring Pastors Fellowship is a legendary but entirely real phenomenon.)

The church grew quickly to become one of the larger fellowships in the Portland area. Finances were tight in the early years, but eventually Alcorn began to draw what he considered a generous salary. Furthermore, he began to write.

In 1985 he published his first book. Others followed, and though the royalty checks were not huge they made a significant addition to his income as a pastor. Alcorn was enthusiastic about writing, so much so that he felt torn between his pastoral responsibilities and the time he needed for books and articles.

The royalty checks helped prime another emerging passion. After specializing in counseling and family life at Good Shepherd, Alcorn had asked to concentrate on missions. As he learned more about overseas needs, he wanted to give more to meet them.

Studying Scripture impressed on him the importance God placed on generosity. He and Nanci and their two girls had always lived simply—not entirely by choice. Now, as their income increased, they kept expenses at the same level and gave the difference to needy causes. A book, Money, Possessions, and Eternity, offered Alcorn's detailed scriptural examination of wealth. In it, Alcorn challenged Christians to give sacrificially.

The book was published just as a third passion reached its peak. For years Alcorn had preached outspokenly against abortion. He served on the board of Portland's first Pregnancy Counseling Center. He and Nanci took a pregnant teenager into their home while she prepared to give birth and give up her child for adoption.

Yet nothing seemed to make any difference. Year after year, abortion clinics killed hundreds of thousands of unborn children.

"The issue was consuming my mind and heart," Alcorn says. "When that light is turned on, you can't turn it off."

In 1986 Randall Terry had launched Operation Rescue, a national effort that tried to break the abortion stalemate through civil disobedience. By blocking clinic doors, protesters hoped to prevent at least a few abortions. Alcorn agonized. He had always respected the law and never dreamed of participating in civil disobedience.

Nevertheless, in January 1989 he asked his church elders for permission to participate in local protests. With some reluctance they granted it.

Chained
To scan headlines from that period in The Oregonian is to re-enter a forgotten world of struggle. Rescue protests marched repeatedly to Portland abortion clinics, blocking access with their bodies. Clinics fought back ferociously, enlisting all the powers of law to their side. In clearing protesters, police were often less than gentle.

Accusations and counteraccusations filled the air. Rescuers claimed that press accounts were highly biased and sometimes false. Prochoice voices claimed property damage and savage emotional harassment of women who were in desperate straits. Though Alcorn says the rescue movement in Portland (not affiliated with Operation Rescue) worked hard to be peaceful and respectful toward women seeking abortions, leaders always had to contend with fringe individuals who favored more dramatic tactics.

The prochoice cause got the courts to level harsh fines and jail sentences against protesters, particularly those who refused to promise future good behavior. Clinics pursued civil suits, hoping to bankrupt those who participated in rescues.

Alcorn emerged as a vocal leader, frequently quoted. It was an intensely lonely time for him and his family. A private person, Nanci began to hate going to the grocery store, or even to church, because of the "cow eyes" people would show her.

Only when she went to her daughters' sporting events did she find refuge. People there knew her only as the mother of Karina and Angela.

She despised being the object of others' sympathy. "I wanted to take people aside and say, 'You know, we're not nuts.' "

A lawyer for the abortion clinic made a statement in court that stuck in Alcorn's memory. "My clients," he said, "have every bit as much right to perform abortions as McDonald's has to sell hamburgers." Alcorn knew perfectly well that the man spoke truly, in a legal sense; but what an upside-down world they lived in, where selling hamburgers was on a par with taking the lives of babies.

Though arrested a number of times, Alcorn spent only one night in jail. Chained hand and foot, pushed down a corridor full of gawking spectators and flashing cameras, stripped and subjected to a body cavity search, refused food or medicine when guards wouldn't believe that he was an insulin-dependent diabetic, he learned what it meant to be treated as a criminal.

One of his best friends, Ron Norquist, spent nine months in jail, losing his job and his house in the process. Nanci says, "The experience taught us to understand what it means to say, 'We won't always receive justice in this world.' "

Survival mode
In May 1990, when he quit his job, Alcorn's convictions seemed to have brought him to a dead end. In the face of fierce legal consequences, rescues were petering out. He had planned to pastor at Good Shepherd for his entire life. If he went to any other church—any other job, for that matter—the legal judgment would travel with him. And he did not want to go to any other church. He wanted his children, 10 and 12 years old, to continue at the Good Shepherd School they loved. All that seemed impossible, gone for good.

Alcorn's passion for generous giving and for missions would find few avenues for expression, it seemed, with his working at minimum wage. (By law, if he made more than that his wages would be garnished.) Nanci, a stay-at-home mom, presumably would have to get a job to support the family.

Trying to think through possibilities, Alcorn remembered the conflicts he had felt between pastoral work and writing. He had taken months of leave without pay in order to write. Now, apparently, he had as many months of leave as he could ever wish—if he could find a way to survive.

As he pondered his options, Alcorn realized that his family was well prepared. Since they had struggled to give generously, they lived simply as a matter of course. They had always driven old cars. They did not have loans to repay or an expensive lifestyle to support. Just two months before, they had paid off the mortgage on their house. They could not live on air, but they could live on very little.

Alcorn got an idea. With three months of bridging help from the church, the Alcorns set up a nonprofit organization in their home—Eternal Perspectives Ministry (epm). Working for the organization at minimum wage, Alcorn would write and speak. He would have the freedom to emphasize his passion—generosity, missions, and prolife advocacy. Nanci would handle the administration as a part-time secretary, paid a secretary's wage. Between the two of them, they would earn enough to get by.

That depended on some income for epm, however. Eventually, book royalties could make a substantial contribution. For the present, however, the Alcorns would have to depend on the support of people who believed in their passions.

They sent out a letter to about 90 families, mostly from their church, appealing for support in the lowest key possible. The response warmed them. They had felt very alone, but evidently their church fellowship cared for them deeply. With such support, they believed they could make it. (An anonymous donor paid the girls' tuition at Good Shepherd School.)

Fruitfulness
"We have suffered nothing," Nanci Alcorn emphasizes. "But I have suffered many things in my mind."

For years after beginning epm, the Alcorns lived with the possibility of losing their home. A second suit found Alcorn responsible for $8.2 million in punitive damages. His lawyer warned that if the clinic pursued aggressively, the Alcorns could lose what little they held in Nanci's name, including the house.

Gradually the anxiety died, however, as their antagonists failed to pursue their assets. Alcorn's books began to sell, and royalty checks came in to epm. In 1994 he published his first novel; five more have followed.

Alcorn's books have reached a growing audience. He has spoken to wider and more influential audiences across the country, sticking to his passions of generosity, missions, and defending life. It has been years now since epm needed contributions to pay its modest expenses; instead the organization has become a de facto foundation, passing on all royalty checks to mission causes. In the last three years epm has given away $500,000.

Meanwhile the Alcorns live and do business in the same modest three-bedroom home. (Four years ago they added an office to the garage.) They drive used cars that are donated to the organization. Alcorn still receives the minimum wage, plus speaking honorariums. He has not used an atm or written a check since 1990.

The clinic still has eight years in which to collect on the $8.2 million judgment against Alcorn. The Alcorns don't much care.

They do not see themselves as heroes and are quick to say that they have made few if any sacrifices. They also emphasize that not everyone would be able to follow the same path. "It would be a lot harder for a carpenter."

The Alcorns more often talk about all they have gained. "It would have been very difficult to leave the pastorate to become a writer and speaker," Alcorn says. "Suddenly I had no choice."

Though he suffers some nostalgia for the pastorate, he approaches his current work with gusto. He loves writing. He loves giving away money to ministries far and wide, and he loves his chance to influence people nationally.

Furthermore, he feels obvious pride in his grown and married daughters. They gained a lot, he believes, from living through difficult choices. For one thing, "our kids are givers, and I don't think we ever could have lectured them into that."

Last year author Alcorn began revising his book Money, Possessions, and Eternity, which came out just as he became involved in prolife rescues. "In pastoral ministries you sometimes have to preach on things that you haven't learned that well. If you're going to preach on prayer, you better do some praying this week!"

The same principle applied to his writing on money and possessions. Fourteen years haven't changed his mind on much, but as he reread his own words he recognized truths he had not much experienced at the time he wrote of them.

For example, he wrote, "I may 'know' that I will receive a promotion and pay raise in September, but God has not guaranteed me that. Plans change . . . " They do indeed. Within a year of the book's publication, Alcorn had lost his job and "owned" nothing beyond his clothing.

"It used to be we would say that my name was on the bank account, but God was the owner. Well, now my name's not even on the account. There's not even an illusion that anything belongs to me."

There's another noteworthy line in the book: " 'All I have needed Thy hand hath provided—Great is thy faithfulness, Lord, unto me!' We sing it, but do we mean it?"

In the book that question relates to the question of a lifestyle built on debt. It might, though, have served as a more general question for the Alcorns, as they stood unknowingly poised on the edge of an abyss.

The question can be answered now. They sing it, and they mean it.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: abortion; abortionists; faith; prolife
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To: BibChr
Anyone can hide behind God to justify their criminal behavior. I could just easily say that God wants me to to kill prostitutes and homosexuals.

A true prophet claims to be on God's side. A false prophet claims God is on his side. See the difference?

41 posted on 04/23/2003 6:54:45 AM PDT by AppyPappy (If You're Not A Part Of The Solution, There's Good Money To Be Made In Prolonging The Problem.)
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To: miltonim; All
Has anyone here read any of Randy Alcorn's books? Just curious.....I have.
42 posted on 04/23/2003 6:55:30 AM PDT by mommybain (not Walmart greeter material)
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To: AppyPappy
I'm fairly clear on what you HAVEN'T done. That wasn't the question.

I really would appreciate if you would go back and answer my actual questions -- I've asked you several. I am interested in your answer.

Dan
43 posted on 04/23/2003 6:55:42 AM PDT by BibChr (LIBERALISM = choices without consequences)
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To: AppyPappy
I could just easily say that God wants me to to kill prostitutes and homosexuals.

Not really. God forbids murder and vigilantism.

Is it really your position that we are never to break manmade law? Are you regretful of the American Revolution?

Dan

44 posted on 04/23/2003 6:57:26 AM PDT by BibChr (LIBERALISM = choices without consequences)
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To: Colofornian
This is what I love about you John McArthur types: You advocate something that 95% of Christians say would be a better response--"witness lawfully outside of clinics"--yet make no provision to actually do so

That's what I love about you bomb throwers. You always want someone else to pull the trigger in the name of Jesus. Jesus wants you to kill abortionists. Why don't you do it? Do you hate Jesus?

When was the last time YOU were arrested for Jesus?

45 posted on 04/23/2003 6:57:31 AM PDT by AppyPappy (If You're Not A Part Of The Solution, There's Good Money To Be Made In Prolonging The Problem.)
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To: BibChr
I'm fairly clear on what you HAVEN'T done

Describe for me what I haven't done, Dan. I'll wait patiently.

46 posted on 04/23/2003 6:59:18 AM PDT by AppyPappy (If You're Not A Part Of The Solution, There's Good Money To Be Made In Prolonging The Problem.)
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To: AppyPappy
All this guy did was sully the pro-life cause for a few minutes of glory.

This was pretty much Judas's complaint about Jesus.

Jesus did many symbolic protests including the one where he chased out the money changers in the temple. The power of that act has survived the centuries and has power for people today to fight against evil.

47 posted on 04/23/2003 6:59:50 AM PDT by VRWC_minion (Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and most are right)
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To: StDonTheBaptist
I got one of his books right here... "Deadline" not too bad...his writtten 11 books..
he should be ok..
If the real "baby killers" get off his back
48 posted on 04/23/2003 7:00:56 AM PDT by joesnuffy (Moderate Islam Is For Dilettantes)
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To: AppyPappy
shamed the pro-life cause by engaging in criminal behavior

Again, I suppose Rahab "shamed the Israelite cause by engaging in criminal behavior." How dare both James and the author of Hebrews cite her favorably in the New Testament! I suppose you'll need to take them to task when you get to heaven. Paul was called a trouble-maker, was accused of being an assassin, was repeatedly arrested. That black sheep, Paul. He was such a nuisance to our prideful reputation.

for publicity

There you go, judging Randy Alcorn's motives. So glad you can venture into his heart & know what his motivation was. You can judge a man's fruit--his behavior--but not his motives. You're superimposing the motive.

Believe me, pro-life folks can protest without risking arrest if they just wanted to do so for publicity sake. When they do so, those are symbolic gestures. When they risk arrest, those are NOT symbolic gestures.

Just be thankful that Jesus didn't simply make "a symbolic prayerful gesture" from heaven to save us. Instead, He came down to earth in human form to bodily block the door to hell on our behalf. It wasn't a publicity stunt. It wasn't symbolic. It wasn't a gesture. It riled the prince of this earth and the religious & political authorities. It was pure self-sacrifice.

I like what Randy Alcorn has done for the pre-born better than what most pro-lifers in name only have not done for the pre-born.

49 posted on 04/23/2003 7:01:02 AM PDT by Colofornian
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To: BibChr
Are you regretful of the American Revolution? Dan

I'm beginning to wonder, the more I understand the bible teaching regarding authority.

50 posted on 04/23/2003 7:01:39 AM PDT by VRWC_minion (Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and most are right)
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Comment #51 Removed by Moderator

To: AppyPappy
When was the last time YOU were arrested for Jesus?

1990 Did jail time for peacefully sitting in front of an abortion clinic. "Lord, when did we see you hungry or thirsty or a stranger or needing clothes or sick or in prison, and did not help you? He will reply, 'I tell you the truth, whatever you did not do for one of the least of these, you did not do for me.' " (Matt. 25:44-45)

52 posted on 04/23/2003 7:04:18 AM PDT by Colofornian
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To: AppyPappy
No need for sarcasm.

You haven't done what this man did, what you are criticizing. The point of your posting here thus far.

And now, please do answer my questions.

Dan
53 posted on 04/23/2003 7:04:31 AM PDT by BibChr (LIBERALISM = choices without consequences)
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To: VRWC_minion
I agree, I think it's a valid question; I also think there's an answer, but I do want to try to stay with the subject. I'm having a really tough time getting Pappy to do more than criticize people, say what shouldn't be done, and be sarcastic.

Dan
54 posted on 04/23/2003 7:06:05 AM PDT by BibChr (LIBERALISM = choices without consequences)
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To: AppyPappy
bomb throwers

So everybody who peacefully sits down in front of an abortion clinic to block the door is a "bomb thrower?"

55 posted on 04/23/2003 7:06:11 AM PDT by Colofornian
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To: BibChr
Here is Randy's web site. http://www.epm.org.

He sends out a free newsletter with a lot of great information and challenging articles. One thing about Randy and Nanci - they live out their faith to the nth degree. No compromises. They have such integrity.
56 posted on 04/23/2003 7:08:12 AM PDT by repubmom
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To: Illbay
Simple question: Why not just obey the law? People like this deserve the misery they give themselves.

The same could have been said of the people who operated the (illegal) Underground Railway in the 19th Century, and those who (illegally) hid Jews in their homes in Europe in the 1930's and 40's

57 posted on 04/23/2003 7:11:08 AM PDT by SauronOfMordor (Heavily armed, easily bored, and off my medication)
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To: Nathaniel Fischer
Are you unable to discern the difference between non-violent protests and bomb throwing?

Bomb throwing is slang for outrageous acts, not necessarily avtually bombs.

58 posted on 04/23/2003 7:13:41 AM PDT by AppyPappy (If You're Not A Part Of The Solution, There's Good Money To Be Made In Prolonging The Problem.)
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To: repubmom
All that surely seems to come out in the article. HIs Pro-Life Answers was a really good book.

I'm unsure why some seem to find him so threatening that he needs to be attacked, not simply disagreed with. Does his example of laying his all on the line for his convictions convict the smugly inactive? I don't know; it happens.

Dan

59 posted on 04/23/2003 7:13:57 AM PDT by BibChr (LIBERALISM = choices without consequences)
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To: BibChr
C'mon Dan. You already witnessed that you know that I haven't done anything. Why would I bother to defend myself? You know every hair on my head.
60 posted on 04/23/2003 7:14:50 AM PDT by AppyPappy (If You're Not A Part Of The Solution, There's Good Money To Be Made In Prolonging The Problem.)
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