 I want to invite David Moser, pastor at Southside Fellowship here in Elkhart, to come up to share briefly his experience of being in ministry integrity circles, one of the programs that we offer here at MBS. Thanks, Julia. I'm here to offer you my advice. I've been in ministry for 30 years. I've been serving my current congregation Southside Fellowship for 17 years. A little before the pandemic, I hit a wall, a brick wall. I began to doubt myself and my calling. Southside Fellowship needed to go in a new direction. I was not sure whether I was the pastor for that job to lead them through a time of transition. I wasn't sure if I was going to be able to stay in the ministry. Maybe I needed to make a transition myself. The word transition is born of a Latin word meaning to transire, which means to cross over. I wasn't sure how to make the journey across. In Mark, Jesus calms the storm. The winds of adversity, I reached out for help. I signed up for an integrity circle. I connected with Julia, who had been a student here during that time, and administrative assistant for Southside Fellowship. I connected with David Miller and with Nakisha. I connected with a group of other pastors who could listen deeply and make the journey with me. Maybe you're a pastor who's wondering what new direction your congregation should go, or maybe you're a pastor who's wondering if it's time to retire, or maybe you're a pastor wondering if it's time to take up a new ministry in a new location. All of those conversations can be held safely in these integrity circles, and you can build deep connections with others who will help you make that journey. One of the questions Southside Fellowship was asking itself was what direction it should go in regards to this place. We had been worshiping in this chapel for 50 years, more than 50 years, had a deep relationship with the seminary, and the congregation was wondering if it was time to head out in a new direction, move the whole congregation to a new place, and start another kind of ministry somewhere else. The integrity circles helped me walk with the congregation with integrity. The congregation surprised me. They realized they were in love with this place, and they rededicated themselves to the work of supporting AMBS through their presence here, and they sold their office on Misha Walker Road so that they could move their pastor into the basement. I now have the safest place on AMBS if there's a tornado. When you go downstairs today, and are a part of those small groups, you'll be in my office. And I left the doors open. You're welcome to look in and see the office. The fellowship space down there we share is a congregation. The artwork on the walls is all Southside Fellowship. We're here to stay. And because of the integrity circles, I'm still a pastor. I hope you sign up.