About Pastor Blaise
About Blaise Shields, Pastor of Youth and Family Ministry
10 Minute Read
Testimony
Grandpa once told me the story of how our family started going to church: when he was a young man, he heard the church down the street held a dance every week. He wanted to meet girls, so he started going to Southport Presbyterian Church (SPC), on the South Side of Indianapolis - amazing, huh?! Little did he know that God would use this (moderately selfish and silly) decision to impact our family for generations.
My grandpa, and so my mom, actually didn't end up attending regularly. Jesus and church were important on Christmas and Easter, but that was it. However, when I was born, it was very important to her that my sister and I go to the Christian school at SPC. On my dad's side, my aunt was a strong Christian and taught us about Jesus. God used these two inputs to teach me about Jesus as a child and I'd say from a very young age, I believed.
For 6th grade, I left my little Christian school at SPC and started going to public school. Eventually I would grow to like public school, but the first several years were very hard. I didn't have any friends and was actually made fun of for being a Christian (ironic since my family still did not go to church at the time). I knew and loved Jesus, but was not prepared to survive on my own. My family also began to have several critical problems at home. Life became very dark. I asked God why he was giving me so much when he knew I couldn't handle it...in actuality, he was carrying me and preparing to bring me back to himself.
In 8th grade, my dad told me two things: 1.) Blaise you should start doing track, like your sister and 2.) you should start going to youth group at SPC. My dad is not the kind of person to compel me or anyone else to go to church and so, though I resisted at first, I knew I should listen. He knew that our family needed help, and maybe the church was a place he could find it. Thankfully, he was right. God also used track and cross country to give me some friends and something to work toward; they became life-long tools in God's hand to shape me.
At youth group, I felt the love of God and of his people for the first time in years. My dad, sister, and I started going to church on Sundays. I soaked up as much as I could. I went on every mission trip, to every Bible study, to every Sunday School class, and helped lead our chapter of Fellowship of Christian Athletes at school.
At home, the Lord brought a police officer who gave us the exact piece of advice that my parents needed to get custody of my niece, Kaiya. My older sister Krista, Kaiya's mom, was making very dangerous choices. She had already lost custody of her son, Corey, when he was an infant. He was adopted by my grandparents (the same grandpa who got connected to SPC because of the dances). My other older sister, Erika, also had two children with her husband Jonathan: Katelyn and Jeremiah. Erika adopted Corey after our grandparents passed away. After Krista lost custody of Kaiya, we made the hard choice to cut off communication with her for several years.
Late in high school, some of my upper classmen friends returned from their first year at Bible College at Columbia International University. They said they liked it, so that was good enough for me (not a great way to pick a college). But, by God's direction, it was the perfect place for me to go. They had an accelerated BA to Master of Divinity program with a concentration in chaplaincy. Besides that, they had a new track team and I was able to continue running in college, something I never dreamed of. My experience in athletics shaped my leadership philosophy and still impacts me today.
I like to say that seminary is like manure - not because it is a load of cr*p - but because it is meant to make young men and women grow in their faith, knowledge, ministry skills very quickly, and it did that for me. Mentorship, practical skills, and hard-learned lessons from athletics and volunteering at my church in Columbia prepared me for life. At some point, my pastor at SPC called me and asked, "Blaise, what are you doing down there by the way?" I told him I wanted to become a pastor and he said, "Well, you could have told me!" And he began preparing me for the particular requirements of the Evangelical Presbyterian Church. At the same time, I was preparing to become a Navy Chaplain and commissioned in 2021.
During one particularly stressful and hard semester, I found myself again asking "God, where are you, why aren't you helping me...I feel so alone." On a walk to class, I heard the Lord tell me, "Blaise, you need my grace too - you aren't so perfect. You are hurting yourself and others with expectations that even I don't have." Slowly but surely, I began to heal.
During the summer of 2020, I was a hospital chaplain in Muncie, IN. Being so close to the sick and dying changed my life. It also gave me a window into the healthcare system that most people don't ever get. A friend of mine was living in the same city and, through his family, I met Alexis who was on her way to work as a nurse at the same hospital. We went on a few dates that summer and the Lord gave us a very strong connection. My time as a hospital chaplain continues to help me understand the unique struggles of her work and I'm so thankful for it.
During winter break of 2020, I visited Auburn for a week as a kind of interview. Alexis wanted to come see me and, awkwardly, I told Pastor Adam that I needed to know a good place to take Alexis on a date (while I was supposed to be working). Incredibly, he and Sarah invited me and Alexis to dinner at their house! I knew then that St. Andrew Church was a special place.
To make a long story short, I moved to Auburn and began as the Assistant Pastor in June, 2021. Alexis and I got married in June of 2022. St. Andrew Church has been an amazing, and challenging, place for me to grow as a pastor. It is filled with people of incredible character, warmth, and faith. At the same time, I was still interested in the Navy. In 2023, I attended Officer Development School (boot camp) in Rhode Island and it taught me a lot about leadership and endurance. In October of 2024, while I was at Chaplain Basic School, I received news that Krista had died by suicide. To say the least, I was very sad; we had reconnected the prior year. I take comfort that she died knowing that I loved her and forgave her and that Jesus loved her and forgave her.
In March of 2025, my son Atticus was born, on Ash Wednesday. That was the best day of my life so far. Yet, later that year, I received news that my nephew, Krista's son, had also died by suicide. I was crushed in a way that I had never been before...our church and our denomination did such a good job supporting me and my family. Suicide is a very serious problem in our world, people need the hope and truth of the good news about Jesus (and medical help as necessary). If you or someone you know is struggling with suicidal ideas, get professional help. I also chose to exit the Navy that year and commit my full attention to my family and our church.
I'm so thankful for everything the Lord has done in my life, and there is a lot more that I could say. I hope this summary of my life story and testimony has given you the opportunity to get to know me better.
My grandpa, and so my mom, actually didn't end up attending regularly. Jesus and church were important on Christmas and Easter, but that was it. However, when I was born, it was very important to her that my sister and I go to the Christian school at SPC. On my dad's side, my aunt was a strong Christian and taught us about Jesus. God used these two inputs to teach me about Jesus as a child and I'd say from a very young age, I believed.
For 6th grade, I left my little Christian school at SPC and started going to public school. Eventually I would grow to like public school, but the first several years were very hard. I didn't have any friends and was actually made fun of for being a Christian (ironic since my family still did not go to church at the time). I knew and loved Jesus, but was not prepared to survive on my own. My family also began to have several critical problems at home. Life became very dark. I asked God why he was giving me so much when he knew I couldn't handle it...in actuality, he was carrying me and preparing to bring me back to himself.
In 8th grade, my dad told me two things: 1.) Blaise you should start doing track, like your sister and 2.) you should start going to youth group at SPC. My dad is not the kind of person to compel me or anyone else to go to church and so, though I resisted at first, I knew I should listen. He knew that our family needed help, and maybe the church was a place he could find it. Thankfully, he was right. God also used track and cross country to give me some friends and something to work toward; they became life-long tools in God's hand to shape me.
At youth group, I felt the love of God and of his people for the first time in years. My dad, sister, and I started going to church on Sundays. I soaked up as much as I could. I went on every mission trip, to every Bible study, to every Sunday School class, and helped lead our chapter of Fellowship of Christian Athletes at school.
At home, the Lord brought a police officer who gave us the exact piece of advice that my parents needed to get custody of my niece, Kaiya. My older sister Krista, Kaiya's mom, was making very dangerous choices. She had already lost custody of her son, Corey, when he was an infant. He was adopted by my grandparents (the same grandpa who got connected to SPC because of the dances). My other older sister, Erika, also had two children with her husband Jonathan: Katelyn and Jeremiah. Erika adopted Corey after our grandparents passed away. After Krista lost custody of Kaiya, we made the hard choice to cut off communication with her for several years.
Late in high school, some of my upper classmen friends returned from their first year at Bible College at Columbia International University. They said they liked it, so that was good enough for me (not a great way to pick a college). But, by God's direction, it was the perfect place for me to go. They had an accelerated BA to Master of Divinity program with a concentration in chaplaincy. Besides that, they had a new track team and I was able to continue running in college, something I never dreamed of. My experience in athletics shaped my leadership philosophy and still impacts me today.
I like to say that seminary is like manure - not because it is a load of cr*p - but because it is meant to make young men and women grow in their faith, knowledge, ministry skills very quickly, and it did that for me. Mentorship, practical skills, and hard-learned lessons from athletics and volunteering at my church in Columbia prepared me for life. At some point, my pastor at SPC called me and asked, "Blaise, what are you doing down there by the way?" I told him I wanted to become a pastor and he said, "Well, you could have told me!" And he began preparing me for the particular requirements of the Evangelical Presbyterian Church. At the same time, I was preparing to become a Navy Chaplain and commissioned in 2021.
During one particularly stressful and hard semester, I found myself again asking "God, where are you, why aren't you helping me...I feel so alone." On a walk to class, I heard the Lord tell me, "Blaise, you need my grace too - you aren't so perfect. You are hurting yourself and others with expectations that even I don't have." Slowly but surely, I began to heal.
During the summer of 2020, I was a hospital chaplain in Muncie, IN. Being so close to the sick and dying changed my life. It also gave me a window into the healthcare system that most people don't ever get. A friend of mine was living in the same city and, through his family, I met Alexis who was on her way to work as a nurse at the same hospital. We went on a few dates that summer and the Lord gave us a very strong connection. My time as a hospital chaplain continues to help me understand the unique struggles of her work and I'm so thankful for it.
During winter break of 2020, I visited Auburn for a week as a kind of interview. Alexis wanted to come see me and, awkwardly, I told Pastor Adam that I needed to know a good place to take Alexis on a date (while I was supposed to be working). Incredibly, he and Sarah invited me and Alexis to dinner at their house! I knew then that St. Andrew Church was a special place.
To make a long story short, I moved to Auburn and began as the Assistant Pastor in June, 2021. Alexis and I got married in June of 2022. St. Andrew Church has been an amazing, and challenging, place for me to grow as a pastor. It is filled with people of incredible character, warmth, and faith. At the same time, I was still interested in the Navy. In 2023, I attended Officer Development School (boot camp) in Rhode Island and it taught me a lot about leadership and endurance. In October of 2024, while I was at Chaplain Basic School, I received news that Krista had died by suicide. To say the least, I was very sad; we had reconnected the prior year. I take comfort that she died knowing that I loved her and forgave her and that Jesus loved her and forgave her.
In March of 2025, my son Atticus was born, on Ash Wednesday. That was the best day of my life so far. Yet, later that year, I received news that my nephew, Krista's son, had also died by suicide. I was crushed in a way that I had never been before...our church and our denomination did such a good job supporting me and my family. Suicide is a very serious problem in our world, people need the hope and truth of the good news about Jesus (and medical help as necessary). If you or someone you know is struggling with suicidal ideas, get professional help. I also chose to exit the Navy that year and commit my full attention to my family and our church.
I'm so thankful for everything the Lord has done in my life, and there is a lot more that I could say. I hope this summary of my life story and testimony has given you the opportunity to get to know me better.
Guiding Values
Here I'd like to share some principles that guide my life, ministry, and leadership philosophy so you can know "where I'm coming from":
- Friendship is an important ministry. Just being a good friend will lead to loving people like Jesus loves and, often, toward fulfilling my responsibilities as a pastor. It is important to note that friendship is loving and kind, but also includes correction (Proverbs 27:6).
- Rest is part of the plan. If you look at a training plan, it shows everything you should be doing. But, the blank space includes something very important: rest. Rest is part of God's training plan and if we refuse it we will find ourselves broken physically, mentally, spiritually, relationally, and emotionally. Rest should be a regular part of our plan for life on a weekly, monthly, and annual basis. In my life, this includes committing at least one day a week to rest and my family. Also, using all of my 4 weeks of vacation each year. Pastor Adam pointed out to me that music does a good job of this in the sheet music. A song without rest is just an ugly scream. (Isaiah 58)
- Children and youth ministry is extremely important. My youth pastor at SPC is retiring after 40 years of youth ministry, at the same church. This is an exceptional case for sure. But, his example showed me that ministering to children and youth is a worthy life-long calling. All pastors are called to do this, actually. But, in my case, my job is focused on them, and I'm glad for it. (Luke 18:16).
- The most effective ministry to children and teens is to their family. This proposition is supported by research done by the Fuller Youth Institute, you can look it up. But, also by common observation. Families have the greatest impact on their children and so one of the most important ways to impact them is to love their families well. (2 Timothy 1:5).
- The purpose of youth group is to help children and teens become adult Christians. There is no such thing as graduation from the church. Following Jesus isn't just for when we are kids and teens. Instead, I try to help our students have a vision for themselves as the future leaders of the church. To think about what it will be like when, one day, they are taking my job (hopefully long from now). This process must start by giving them leadership and responsibility in the church now, as appropriate. (2 Timothy 2:2).
- The work of the Church is about people not programs. Programs are very important, they are the organized way we plan how to minister to people, usually to multiple people at once. Ultimately though, the work of the church is to people, not to build programs, especially if those programs don't work for the people. Ministry that is people centered meets them where they are, often in less organized ways. (Acts 2:46-47).
- Semper Gumby. A well known phrase of the Marines is "semper fi." Yet, in my short military experience, I found a different latin phrase was used just as if not more often: semper gumby. It means, "always flexible." Things change, plans change, people change, and so my goal is to provide opportunities that help people grow in their faith according to their availability. One thing that does not change, however, is the Word of God. That said, the method of my ministry might change, but ultimately the content does not. God has also designated Sunday as the day of communal worship and rest for God's people. In this way, people are challenged to prioritize God's time. (Psalm 102:25-28 / Westminster Confession of Faith chapter 21).
- Marriage. It isn't God's will that everyone be married; singleness is very important. But, marriage is also important and should be "honored by all." Every marriage is worth fighting for. Marriage is also more than just a piece of paper. The legal, spiritual, and relational components of marriage are all equally important. I will encourage you to pour into your marriage, if you are married, and I hope you will do the same for me. That said, in some cases, divorce is necessary. God has grace for people who have been through divorce. (Hebrews 13:4, Matthew 19:6, Westminster Confession of Faith chapter 24).
- God's Primary Instrument is the Church. The Church ("big C") is the wife of Jesus Christ. God's intent has always been to use a people, a community, to reveal himself and change the world. Therefore, participation in the local church is central to the Christian life. You read my story - I wouldn't be here if it weren't for my local church. I was not prepared to survive on my own as a Christian, not only because I was young, but also because none of us are meant to, at least not for long. The church, universal and local, is messy. There is a lot of church hurt. But, there is also a lot of church healing. By leaning on the grace of God alone for healing, and on right policies for accountability, people find in the church, the family of God, as a place of healing, hope, purpose, and faith. (1 Peter 2:9).
Facts and Hobbies
- Fastest marathon time: 2 hours and 47 minutes.
- I volunteer coach for the DeKalb High School cross country and track team.
- I like reading, going on walks, and watching shows with my family.
- I can't throw a ball to save my life but I like to throw a frisbee.
- Breakfast is my favorite meal.
- Enneagram: Type 9.
- Favorite song: Child Again by NEEDTOBREATHE
Recent
Archive
2026
April
Categories
no categories
