An Elevator Can Have Transformative Powers
- By President Matt Proctor
- Published 03 15, 2024

An Elevator Can Have Transformative Powers
In a sermon years ago, Kentucky preacher Wayne Smith told about an old hillbilly who took his wife and son to the big city for the first timeāso many new things! The hillbilly parked in front of a hotel and took his son into the lobby, where they saw two metal doors opening and closing. Bells rang, and lights flashed. The son asked, āPa, whatās that?ā The father had never seen an elevator before. āI have no idea, Junior.ā
They watched as a little 95-year-old lady hobbled up, pushed a button, and when the metal doors opened, she stepped inside. The doors closed, bells rang, lights flashed, and when the doors opened, out stepped a beautiful 25-year-old woman. The old hillbilly turned and said, āJuniorā¦go get your mother.ā The church roared, and Wayne laughed loudest.
An elevator can have transformative powers, and Iām going to ask you to help our elevator regain those powers...Ā
Iāve never seen an elevator restore youth. (I wish. At 54, I canāt stand up without sound effects.) But I have seen an elevator transform three types of people at Ozark.
An elevator can transform discouraged students. In the OCC cafeteria, the downstairs line serves good homestyle food like lasagna or pork chops, alongside veggies, salad, and fruit. But upstairs, the OCC Grill serves comfort foodāhamburgers, hot dogs, pizza, fries, food that feels like a hugāwhich might just get someone through finals week.
It did for Katie. When my wife was a little girl, she was a picky eater. (Her mom finally bought 9-year-old Katie a little red skillet to make her own beloved grilled cheese sandwiches.) As an OCC student, Katie sometimes wasnāt feeling the downstairs cafeteria menu, so she went up to the OCC Grill. The patty melts upstairs didnāt just warm her stomach; they warmed her soul.
Katieās not the only student who ever needed comfort food. When Israel was overwhelmed learning Godās Word, Ezra commanded, āGo, eat the fat, and do not be sad, for the joy of the Lord is your strength.ā (Neh 8:10) Iāve seen students weary from studyāand from jobs, ministries, tight finances, family challengesātrudge upstairs in the caf, sit down with a hamburger and fries, eat and laugh with friends, and walk downstairs 30 minutes later with a spring in their step, ready to keep going.
Transformed. But where does the elevator come in? Iāll get thereā¦
An elevator can transform nervous prospective students (and parents).Ā Every Tuesday, prospective students visit campus. With their parents, they sit in a class, worship in chapel, take a tour, grab lunch upstairs in the cafeteria banquet rooms, and consider whether Ozark and ministry are for them. These high schoolers eat with current OCC students and profs, and the table conversation plays a big role in recruiting.
It did for Israel Tuttle and his parents. On their Tuesday Tour, the Tuttle family traveled further than mostāall the way from Ireland! (Israelās parents serve as missionaries there.) Imagine: youāre thinking about sending your child 4,000 miles away. Youāve never visited the campus. Youāve never met the people. Iām guessing youād feel a bit concerned. You want to know: will this college take care of my son?
In April 2022, the Tuttles took Israel on Ozarkās Tuesday Tourāclass, chapel, and lunch in the banquet rooms. Later that day, Israelās mom posted on Facebook, āIsrael has OFFICIALLY decided 51ĀŅĀ× is where he will be attending! We are on our way home now and color me impressed! They went out of their way to make us feel welcome. Iām happy this will be his new home once he graduates and we are an ocean away!ā
Transformed. Still wondering where the elevator comes in? Keep readingā¦
An elevator can transform tired faculty and staff. Every Friday, in the banquet rooms, 100 or so OCC employees eat lunch together. Our weekly schedules are packed. Classes, student needs, parent/alumni/church conversations, government compliance, 200 events each semester, thousands of visitors each yearāOzark life happens at a fast pace, and by weekās end, our folks are tuckered out. How do we keep a healthy culture? Friday lunches.
Every Friday I walk into that upstairs lunchroom. On the walls hang our seven core values. Around the tables, I see coworkers enjoying a hearty meal. Spouses and kids join usāwe love buying more high chairs!āand I see a friend holding a coworkerās newborn, smiling from ear to ear. Out-of-town alumni drop in to eat, catching us up on life and ministry. A joyful conversational buzz fills the air and fills my heart. We like each other.
After 30 minutes of a shared meal, we share 30 minutes of program. Announcements are made, encouraging notes are read, funny stories are told. Sometimes we play a game. Every week we pray and hear Godās Word, and every week a coworker shares a devotion:
Ā· OCC admin assistant Melissa tells how God is guiding their family as they plant a church.
Ā·Ā OCC cook Misty tells how God sustained their family through 7-year-old Beckhamās leukemia.
Ā·Ā OCC prof Fred tells how God used a mentor to teach him to pray.
Sometimes laughter erupts. Sometimes tears are shed. Always spirits are encouraged because we āate together with glad and sincere hearts.ā (Acts 2:46) Always souls are strengthened, ready for another week of training kingdom leaders.
Transformed. All because of an elevator?
Yes. What do those discouraged students, those nervous high schoolers (and parents), and those tired employees have in common? They were all eating upstairs in our cafeteria. And the way we get the big, heavy containers of food up there isā¦our cafeteria service elevator. The elevator makes the meals happen.
An elevator really can have transformative powers. But I need your help. Our elevator lost those powersā¦
Hereās the problem: the motor on our cafeteria service elevator went kaput. Itās dead, which makes providing those upstairs meals very difficult. The cost for a new elevator motor is $45,000.
Our cafeteria elevator wonāt turn a 95-year-old into a 25-year-old, but the upstairs meals it provides really do transform. When a tired cowboy sees the chuck wagon coming, he yeehaws! When weary soldier Jonathan got a bite to eat, he was ārefreshed. His eyes lit up with renewed vigor.ā (1 Sam 14:27) And when our food-totinā elevator regains power, it can take a student from struggling to strong, a high schooler (and parents) from uncertain to unwavering, an employee from wrung-out to refreshed.
So thank you for considering a gift to purchase a new motor for our cafeteria elevator. With your partnership, meals will be delivered, hearts will be gladdened, and leaders will be trained. Even better? In those leadersā ministries, gospel transformations will happen: the lost saved, the hungry fed, the grieving comforted, the lonely welcomed, and the wounded healed.
And a watching world will want to experience that transformation too. āJuniorā¦go get your mother.ā
Yours in Christ,
Matt Proctor
President
P.S. If you know a high schooler who should consider Ozark or ministry, I would love to eat chicken tenders and brownies with them in our upstairs cafeteria on a Tuesday Tour. Sign them up at and come along!
*NOTE: Any gifts above the needed amount will be used for similar campus projects.
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