New Church Life May/June 2015 | Page 60

n e w c h u r c h l i f e : m ay / j u n e 2 0 1 5 from San Diego Bay is almost the same view as standing at Durban harbor and looking back toward the Berea. I cannot see myself making another pastoral move – although the Lord may have other plans for me. I fully intend to fill my remaining years as a minister serving the New Church in Southern California.” Among the highlights of his career he says: “Certainly the construction of Morning Star Chapel while I was pastor in Atlanta is something I am both proud and grateful to have been a part of.  Working with the likes of Jack Martin, Roger Echols, Tom Leeper and Henry Dunlap was interesting to say the least. However, at the end of the day, we got past our many differences and we (the entire congregation) achieved something huge for a small congregation.” He notes that volunteering for the 1996 Olympics and spending nearly six weeks in the Olympic Village in downtown Atlanta “was an experience I will treasure for the rest of my life. If any one of you reading this has a chance to volunteer for the Olympic Games, do it!”  At the end of the Games, he was offered a paid staff position for the Sydney Games. “It was a tipping point for me – become part of a future Olympics, or remain a pastor in the New Church?  I would like to say that it was the doctrines of the New Church that kept me in ministry, but that would not be true. It was my planned engagement to Anna Hyatt that prevented me taking off for Sydney and a completely different life.” Their eldest son, Sean, was born on September 20, 2001 – just nine days after 9/11. Mark says his hopes and goals  today are pretty much what they have always been: TO LOVE PEOPLE. As for hobbies and interests, he confesses: “I have always been into sports.  I have a huge ego and a minor aggressive streak (admittedly not pastoral qualities). When I arrived in Bryn Athyn from South Africa I could not skate. But watching just a few minutes of ice hockey, I knew that sport was for me. That first winter I taught myself to skate with some help from the kids, and the following winter I was playing hockey for my college. Since we needed a goalie – and I knew I was the worst skater on the team – I volunteered for the position. Fun times. “I scuba dive and have dived with sharks off the African coast.  I have always loved snakes and had a huge python in Atlanta. I have been bitten by a rattlesnake! “I got into running after volunteering for the Olympics. In 1997 I finished my first full marathon under the Olympic Rings in Atlanta in under 3.5 hours. I would run many more marathons, but never again in less than threeand-a-half hours.” Among his favorite books “would have to be the Wilbur Smith novels. I think I have read them all.  The gripping tales of people interwoven with the history of Africa and Europe had me turning pages.  Non-fiction works 280