The first recollection I have of Keith Uffman is when my husband, Lee, came home saying that our then seventh grade son, Ariel, who wanted to go out for track, was being coached by a guy named Keith.
We then had the following conversation:
"Keith who?"
"I have no idea."
"Is he a teacher?"
"I don't think so."
"Then he must be somebody's dad."
"I do not know who he is."
This guy named Keith, who stood near the far corner of the track wearing a big hat, shouting out times to track kids who were trying to run faster, remained a mystery until we heard that his last name was Uffman. The only other person we knew by that name was Mary Helen so by default he had to be her husband.
One day Lee noticed Keith dropping off his daughter for cross county training at Hagan Stone Park--I KNEW he had to be somebody's dad--and as both men are runners, they ran together. In the course of their conversation Keith would tell Lee that when he wasn't coaching middle school track, he was pastoring a church--Alamance Presbyterian Church. But only when asked directly did Keith share with Lee his level of education.
"So what do I call you?" Lee asked. "Reverend? Doctor? Coach?"
"Call me Keith," was his answer.
(We would sometimes refer to him by some variation of the Reverend Doctor Coach Mr. Uffman in the privacy of our own home, but to his face we called him Keith.)
Keith invited us to come to church. Lee invited Keith to come to our oldest son's high school graduation party at our home. We came to Alamance; loved the music, the preaching and the welcome. Keith showed up at our party, politely engaging my parents in conversation, and getting to know so much about us.
As our sons have gone through school, Keith coached Ariel and Joel for track, and Mary Helen taught and coached them in soccer, earning both of the Uffmans a place of honor in our family, reserved for anyone who helps us raise our boys well.
Seven years ago Keith could have introduced himself to us as the Reverend Dr. Uffman, as he has earned that right, but as he explained it to Lee, a title can be a barrier, a division between people, and not necessarily the best way to get to know someone. Though we were not sure what our church affiliation would be, it seemed clear from the start that we had found a friend.
Keith often chooses not to wear a traditional Presbyterian robe, which could further separate himself from the body of Christ. He not only invites ALL of God's children to the table of the Lord to receive communion, but lives out this ecumenical invitation in his studies, in dialogue with interfaith leaders, and in counseling those in need--with a generous portion of compassion and a bit of humor thrown in. It has been up to Keith to remind us that we are all beloved children of God. It is up to God to sort out the rest.
It would take me a year of investigating the Presbyterian faith, including reading the Book of Order, and other great books and authors Keith has continued to recommend, before I was willing to join this church. Keith kept telling me, "Only God can bind your conscience," whatever that means. Thanks to Keith's patient endurance of my endless questioning, I, too, could become a Presbyterian.
When I recently thanked Keith for sharing his pulpit with me so I could read what I had written to the congregation, he was quick to point out that it was never his pulpit, but God's pulpit. It is not his church, but a church in which the Spirit of the Lord dwells.
This is a testament of the character of the man who has been in leadership here for the past 18 years: a quiet man with a brilliant mind, gentle spirit and sparkling wit; a humble minister of the Word who has faithfully yielded his life to serve God and all of us. A guy named Keith.
We then had the following conversation:
"Keith who?"
"I have no idea."
"Is he a teacher?"
"I don't think so."
"Then he must be somebody's dad."
"I do not know who he is."
This guy named Keith, who stood near the far corner of the track wearing a big hat, shouting out times to track kids who were trying to run faster, remained a mystery until we heard that his last name was Uffman. The only other person we knew by that name was Mary Helen so by default he had to be her husband.
One day Lee noticed Keith dropping off his daughter for cross county training at Hagan Stone Park--I KNEW he had to be somebody's dad--and as both men are runners, they ran together. In the course of their conversation Keith would tell Lee that when he wasn't coaching middle school track, he was pastoring a church--Alamance Presbyterian Church. But only when asked directly did Keith share with Lee his level of education.
"So what do I call you?" Lee asked. "Reverend? Doctor? Coach?"
"Call me Keith," was his answer.
(We would sometimes refer to him by some variation of the Reverend Doctor Coach Mr. Uffman in the privacy of our own home, but to his face we called him Keith.)
Keith invited us to come to church. Lee invited Keith to come to our oldest son's high school graduation party at our home. We came to Alamance; loved the music, the preaching and the welcome. Keith showed up at our party, politely engaging my parents in conversation, and getting to know so much about us.
As our sons have gone through school, Keith coached Ariel and Joel for track, and Mary Helen taught and coached them in soccer, earning both of the Uffmans a place of honor in our family, reserved for anyone who helps us raise our boys well.
Seven years ago Keith could have introduced himself to us as the Reverend Dr. Uffman, as he has earned that right, but as he explained it to Lee, a title can be a barrier, a division between people, and not necessarily the best way to get to know someone. Though we were not sure what our church affiliation would be, it seemed clear from the start that we had found a friend.
Keith often chooses not to wear a traditional Presbyterian robe, which could further separate himself from the body of Christ. He not only invites ALL of God's children to the table of the Lord to receive communion, but lives out this ecumenical invitation in his studies, in dialogue with interfaith leaders, and in counseling those in need--with a generous portion of compassion and a bit of humor thrown in. It has been up to Keith to remind us that we are all beloved children of God. It is up to God to sort out the rest.
It would take me a year of investigating the Presbyterian faith, including reading the Book of Order, and other great books and authors Keith has continued to recommend, before I was willing to join this church. Keith kept telling me, "Only God can bind your conscience," whatever that means. Thanks to Keith's patient endurance of my endless questioning, I, too, could become a Presbyterian.
When I recently thanked Keith for sharing his pulpit with me so I could read what I had written to the congregation, he was quick to point out that it was never his pulpit, but God's pulpit. It is not his church, but a church in which the Spirit of the Lord dwells.
This is a testament of the character of the man who has been in leadership here for the past 18 years: a quiet man with a brilliant mind, gentle spirit and sparkling wit; a humble minister of the Word who has faithfully yielded his life to serve God and all of us. A guy named Keith.