Name: John Stroeh ’91 Position: Associate Pastor, The Lutheran Church of the Good
Shepherd Location: Olympia, Wash. Majors: Math and Physics
John Stroeh refers to his journey to become a pastor as a long and interesting
one. After graduating from Wittenberg with a double major in math and physics,
he spent three years at The University of Michigan earning his M.S. degree
in mathematics.
From there, he started doing sales and marketing consulting
in Chicago. Then something happened. It was during the second year of this
job that he journeyed through a vocational crisis, seeking to discover “where
God was calling him.”
After much soul-searching, John entered the master of divinity program at
Luther Seminary in 1996. Following his four years of study, he was ordained
as an
ELCA pastor. His first call was to The Lutheran Church of the Good Shepherd
in Olympia, where he continues to serve as associate pastor.
As a pastor, John’s responsibilities range from preaching to teaching
and pastoral case. He also focuses on youth and family ministry, and on global
mission at Good Shepherd. Last May, John led a group of 12 adults to Tanzania
for a three-week mission during which he helped to bridge cultural barriers
in his quest to share God’s word.
In addition to learning about various church-related social services in
Tanzania, John and the other missionaries led morning and evening devotions,
reflected
on hunger and poverty issues, examined the AIDS epidemic and discussed
service to others with the local people. They also helped build a church
and visited
homes where they shared their lives with others in song, worship, prayer,
at meals and through laughter.
Three months later, John headed to Tijuana, Mexico with 18 people ages
12 through 60 to build two homes and teach Vacation Bible School to
Mexican children.
John takes great joy in the opportunity to teach people of all ages,
from preschoolers through seniors, across cultures and close at home. “I especially enjoy
teaching and leading in intergenerational environments, where there is time
and space given to young people learning from older people, and vise versa,” he
explains.
The varied teaching environments and audiences keep John busy. He
leads a regular chapel/teaching time with preschool children, teaches
junior
high
students
a portion of the confirmation program, which includes retreats
on “Faith
Connections” and “Human Sexuality,” and he leads a regular
Bible study for adults.
John has learned that some of the best teachers are those who do
not pretend to have all the answers. They are also genuinely
concerned about their
students, and they listen to their students both to discover
their questions and learn
from them. The three A’s to good teaching that John follows are be Available,
Authentic and Affirming.
“The place God calls you to is the place where your deep gladness and the
world’s deep hunger meet,” John says, quoting Frederick Beuchner
in Wishful Thinking: A Theological ABC.