This is Vicar David Sivecz of Saint Timothy Lutheran Church. His topic was “fear of change.” He’s experienced a great deal of change in his life. He grew up in Western New York and he’s lived in a variety of places, including Miami, Florida, Cincinnati, Ohio, Louisville, Kentucky, and Atlanta, Georgia. He said of his time in Miami, “For the first time in my life, I knew what it was like to be a minority.”
He wanted to go into the ministry. In fact, he wanted to be a United Methodist minister. He felt that was his calling. After all of that wandering and soul-searching, however, he learned that his calling was to become a Lutheran pastor.
The change in his life was good, Vicar David said. He said that people can experience the joy and the new life and resurrection, “whether you’re 28, 50, 70, or 90.”
“As much as I don’t like change, I do like change,” Vicar David said. His statement was a paradox, a statement that contradicts itself but still rings true.
Change is not only good, it is inevitable. When we resist change, “do we fear losing something?” “We all fear and have some anxiety about change.” Reactions to change include panic, frustration, joy, excitement, grief, and depression. We all resist change. We have fear of losing what we love and what has meaning in our lives.”
I know that, the older I get, the more resistant I am to change. Even if it is good change. Yes, it's all about that comfort zone.