Yes. Usually it was a times of a real personal and/or career crisis. One time in particular really stands out in my memory. I had at the time done all I knew to “get into the ministry,†by which I mean, ministry as a full-time career. After 15 years of being a bivocational minister, my sideline job, which had always been one in which I could earn a decent living, began to diminish markedly in its money-making potential, due to market forces and technological advancement that were quite beyond my control. A job where I had formerly been able to make $20 to $25 an hour as a self-employed contractor working on my computer at home suddenly became, at best, a $10 an hour nightmare. On top of that, the part-time ministry job I had working at the church I LOVED was also going away due to an economic downturn. In desperation, I faced the reality that I would no longer be able to support my wife and two young children, who were 2-1/2 and 6 months of age, respectively. After several days of feeling as if I would lose my mind, I “put out a fleece,†so to speak. I had been told by a good friend of a small church in another state that had been without a pastor for three months. After sending my resume and doing a phone interview, my wife and I were being voted on by the church. I had completely resolved in my heart and mind that if it were God’s will for me to be in the ministry, then this one vote would tell the tale. If we did not get the vote, I was ready to accept that it was not God’s will for me to pastor at all. I would completely stop wasting my time pursuing ministry as a career, and would focus all my time and talent into finding a career in which I could provide for my own household, lest I be worse than an infidel, and deny the faith. I would just be as good a church member as I could be, and would only pursue ‘lay ministries’ from then on. I would just chalk up to sincere mistakenness my perception of having been called to be a pastor. I believe the Lord answered. We were elected unanimously by the church. I still have primarily been bivocational, but in any case, the Lord has always provided for us one way or another.