Thermostat Wars
- By President Matt Proctor
- Published 12 18, 2024

The weather has cooled, so in living rooms, workplace offices, and church sanctuaries, an epic battle has begunāa mighty struggle between two forces, fighting for control, the fate of their world in the balance. Perhaps you yourself are a combatant inā¦the thermostat war.
On one side, the Tropics. These folks want to feel like Jamaica in July. They are heat-seeking missiles who buy heated jackets, heated blankets, and cars with heated seats. Their house feels like a sauna, and if they worked in a wax museum, the figures would melt because temps would be set to āsurface of the sun.ā If the globe is warming, itās because somewhere a Tropic secretly found the Earthās thermostat and turned it up. It was probably your mom.
On the other side, the Arctics. These folks want to feel like Juneau in January. They are cool customers who want their house polar-bear-friendly. If your boss is an Arctic and youāre not, you keep a sweater at work and could make snow angels in the breakroom because temps are set to āmeat locker.ā One December, an Arctic grew tired of his family turning up the thermostat, so he put āChristmas Calculatorā above the dial. The warmer temps were labeled āfewer presentsā and the colder temps were labeled āmore presents.ā This was probably your dad.
In every environment, these two sides struggle for control. Will the living room feel like the Mojave Desert? Will the church sanctuary feel like the Siberian tundra?
Iām going to ask you to play a part in winning the thermostat war.
Iāll confess: Iām an Arctic. My wife is not. (Dating sites should match people solely by thermostat settings.) We just bought her a car with heated seats. Meanwhile, I run my car A/C on low. (My children: āNoses are red, fingers are blue, weāre freezing here, dad, ācause weāre riding with you.ā) I like sleeping with a ceiling fan on, and when Iām by myself, I turn the hotel room thermostat all the way down.
But when Iām not by myself, I have learnedāslowly, over the yearsāto live with what experts call a āhospitable temperature.ā Did you know that OSHA officially recommends that public indoor settings be kept between 68-76°? One journal cited a study showing āoffice temperature has a significant impact on productivity, cognitive performanceā and can even contribute to ānasty office politics.ā Finding a āhospitable temperatureā is important.
And right now, thatās a problem at 51ĀŅĀ×. But you can helpā¦
Most of our buildings are in good shape thermostat-wise, but one is not: the Multi-Purpose Building. The MPB houses our gym and hosts big events like CIY conferences, NCCAA national sports tournaments, Getaway, The Event, Preaching-Teaching Convention, and Commencement. As our largest on-campus venue (seating 1,700), itās where we welcome our greatest number of guests. But thereās a problemā¦
My son Carl is 22, a senior at OCC, and when he played for the Ozark menās basketball team, he won the Hustle Award. He loved playing for Coach Chris Lahm, except for one thing. āDad,ā Carl asked one day, āWhy does Coach set the gym SO HOT?ā He told me heād completely soaked his jersey because basketball practice felt like a Brazilian rainforest. āItās great for working up a big sweat,ā he said. āBut isnāt that a waste of money? Why does Coach set the MPB that high? Weāre cooking.ā Carl is an Arctic and thought Coach was an out-of-control Tropic.
I explained: it wasnāt Coach Lahmās fault. Yes, our MPB at times gets wildly hot, but that was the thermostatās fault. Then I gave Carl more information than he wanted. (Dads do this.) āWe have these old pneumatic controllers for the HVAC system in the MPB. Theyāre original to the building, which was built in the early 1980s, and now they just randomly malfunction. Controlling the temp in there is a roll of the dice.ā
At OCC, weāre not at war OVER the thermostat. Itās war WITH the thermostat! Thatās trouble becauseā¦
In recent days, the MPB thermostat war is getting worse. Sometimesābecause of the old pneumatic controllersāthe MPB temperatures can soar into the 80s and even 90s. Carl is right: it is a waste of money. Worse: in the room where we practice the most hospitality, it creates a very inhospitable temperature.
Spiritually, God wants us hot or cold, not lukewarm, but physically, God did not design our bodies for temperature extremes. God precisely created Earth for human habitationāplenty of liquid H2O, the exact right amount of oxygen, a magnetic shield to protect from harmful rays, gravity that neither crushes nor floats us into spaceāand part of carefully calibrating this planet for human life was the climate. He created Earthās tilt and distance from the sun so that we would neither freeze nor fry.
The Thermostat-Setter set our home at a āhospitable temperature.ā We want to do that for MPB guests.
In January, weāve hired Joplinās Satterlee Plumbing and HVAC to replace the old pneumatic controllers with electronic controllers that are reliable and accurate. I know nothing about HVAC systems, but Iām told this includes ānew temperature sensors, damper actuators, water control valves, communication wiring, relays for pumps and fans, and a new control panel.ā (So itās more than just thermostats.)
With a generous discount from our friends at Satterlee, the total project cost is $150,000. Would you consider a generous gift to OCCās general fund to help with this project?
Every February, we host the annual Preaching-Teaching Convention. A thousand or more church leaders from across the country come to campus for three days of worship, preaching, workshops, fellowship, and meals at a few of Joplinās eight million restaurants. (Weāve got a Joplin eatery for every letter from A-Z, except X.) This year, weāll welcome Andrew Peterson in concert, and many tired servants will be refreshed.
Unless, of course, we canāt get the thermostats fixed. Then they might faint from heat exhaustion.
But with new controllers, hereās our promise: we wonāt let Arctics run the thermostat (like Facebookās Mark Zuckerberg, who keeps his office at a numbing 59°). Nor will we let Tropics turn the MPB into a sweat lodge. Weāll set the temperature reasonably and āoffer hospitality to one another without grumbling.ā (1 Pet 4:9) And many kingdom servants will be recharged for another year of ministry.
This Christmas season, in a world of conflicts far worse than āthermostat wars,ā the good news is: a Savior has come to bring peace on earth. āHe will mediate between nations and will settle international disputes. They will hammer their swords into plowsharesā¦Nation will no longer fight against nation, nor train for war anymore. Come⦠let us walk in the light of the Lord!ā (Is 2:4-5)
Thank you for considering partnership in our mission of training men and women to share that message, and from all of us at OCC, have a merry Christmas!
Yours in Christ,
Matt Proctor
President
P.S. We hope youāll join us for the 2025 Preaching-Teaching Convention. Whether you walk in with a hot Starbucks coffee or an ice-cold Sonic drink, youāll be gladly welcomed! For more details, go to .
Your gift is a sacred trust. We promise to honor your generosity by using your gift in the most effective way to train men and women for Christian service. The project described here reflects OCCās ministry needs at the time of writing. Your gift will go to the general fund to be used where it is needed most when received to prepare students to take the gospel to the world.Ģż
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