Sometimes Jordan Kassabaum does a double-take when someone calls him “pastor.”
“I’m just not used to it,” said the 27-year-old pastor of the First United Methodist Church of Land O’ Lakes. “It seems surreal when I’m standing in front of a congregation.”
Kassabaum, a native of Dade City, was named pastor of the Land O’ Lakes church on July 1.
He is gradually getting to know his new congregation.
“I’m astounded at just how many gifted people are here,” said Kassabaum, who leads a church established in 1959. “My staff are amazing.”
Currently, membership stands at around 200. Kassabaum would like to see that number grow.
The church leader said his title isn’t the important thing — and he doesn’t mind when members of his congregation call him by his first name.
It’s that casual approach he’d like to share with people outside of the church, as well, he said.
For instance, in the past, he has participated in such events as ‘Beer and Hymns,’ where folks gather in a brewery or bar to sing classic church songs. He’s also taken part in ‘Pints and Parables’ which entails sharing drinks while taking part in bible study.
Those are some ways that Kassabaum has tried to break down stereotypes about church, and show it in a new and refreshing light.
“My job is to care for everybody,” he said. “Most of my friends are actually not deeply religious people.”
Early beginnings
Kassabaum was born in Dade City, and grew up there, graduating from Pasco High School.
“I loved it,” Kassabaum said. “When you’re growing up in a place like that, it can seem very restricting. You can’t wait to get out, and you really don’t appreciate that quiet kind of life until you go off and see the rest of the world. Now there’s a certain kind of attraction to it.”
He came from a musical household. His father played the saxophone and his mother played the flute. That influenced him to join the high school band and to play the saxophone.
He enjoyed performing so much that he contemplated it as a career, but he decided not to pursue that because he didn’t want to turn something he loved into a chore.
Kassabaum said he didn’t grow up in a religious home.
On several occasions, he attended a Baptist church that his grandfather had helped to build, but he was not immersed in church life, nor obligated to hold any religious beliefs.
“My parents wanted me to make decisions for myself,” he said. “They didn’t want to impose anything on me.”
In school, he excelled in science and biology, and had a desire to help people in need. That motivated him to look toward a medical career.
Finding meaning in tragedy
Although his desire to help others sparked an interest in medicine, it was his father’s illness that compelled him in that direction. He was just 15 when his father died from brain cancer.
“That really set me on a path towards being just a doctor,” he recounted.
As he was coping with the loss of his father, he began questioning life in general.
It was then that a friend invited him to the First United Methodist Church of Dade City.
“I asked a lot of these tough questions,” Kassabaum recalled. “Is God real? Does God love me? Why do we suffer?”
The church and its congregation provided a place of refuge and solace.
When the pastor describes his spiritual journey to others, he said, he often describes it as both a moment of epiphany, as well as a gradual process.
The transitions he went through, he said, were “fundamental experiences.”
“I was lucky enough to be in a space where there were people who loved and cared about me. Who didn’t seek to fix me,” he said.
As he acquainted himself with the congregation — through bible studies and discussions — he realized that he wanted to remain within the Methodist denomination.
Leadership skills through academics
Kassabaum’s desire to become a doctor took a turn as he began to feel that evangelism was his true calling.
“I don’t think anybody goes into ministry without having a sense of call,” said the pastor. “A sense that God has placed a task for you to complete.”
With that in mind, he enrolled at the University of Florida in 2009. He graduated four years later with a double major in religion and classical civilization.
In 2013, Kassabaum moved to Connecticut to continue studies at Yale Divinity School.
“It was interesting to be exposed to all sorts of different people and different ways of thinking,” said the pastor about Yale’s diversity.
He graduated in 2016 with a Master of Divinity, a standard degree which qualifies a minister to go through an ordination process.
He then returned to Florida, where he worked for two years as a missions intern and adult ministry coordinator.
New and present chapter
Now, he envisions his Land O’ Lakes church becoming a place which is filled with individuals ministering to others with their own unique set of gifts — gifts that not only contribute to the church, but to the community at large.
He already has seen their talents through Sunday school teaching, as well as mission and relief work.
Working with those within the church and inviting others to join, the pastor hopes that one day his congregation will mirror its community — diverse in age groups and ethnicities.
Bob Swan, the church’s facilities manager and a member for 25 years, said “Pastor Kassabaum has brought a wealth of new ideas, and it’s just been great.”
Kassabaum knows that leading a church is not a one-man job, and he’s grateful for his staff and congregation, who have rallied around to help.
“I’ve thoroughly enjoyed my experience here,” the pastor said of his new home church. “I knew this was where God wanted me to be.”
Published August 29, 2018
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