For him, it all added up
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Young Chang
Warren Piper was one of two people at Harbor Christian Church who
knew how much money congregants gave.
He kept track of people’s financial pledges and was the sole guy
responsible for counting the total offerings and depositing them into
the bank.
Having served as the church’s financial secretary for the last 10
to 15 years (Piper is so used to the task he doesn’t remember how
long it’s been exactly), the longtime volunteer retired late last
month because his eyesight is failing, which means working with
numbers gets tiring.
“I have been told that I have macular degeneration, which makes
it difficult to focus on ordinary print and that sort of thing,”
said the 74-year-old Huntington Beach resident.
For the church, Piper’s absence as financial secretary means it is
losing someone greatly trusted.
“It’s a very important position,” Pastor Dennis Short said.
“It’s very confidential, as well as precise and time consuming.”
The church staff is looking for someone new, but in the meantime
held a big celebration of Piper’s many years of service on Sunday.
Piper joined the church about 15 years ago. Piper admitted that,
in the beginning, , he was flattered the church trusted him with
matters as big as money.
“And it was a little scary, if I stopped to think about it,” he
said. “We don’t have somebody standing guard over every step of the
operation.”
His volunteer duties throughout the years included gathering
people’s financial offerings, counting the sum and depositing the
money in the bank. He wrote financial reports every month for church
leaders to read during board meetings, and he sent out letters
quarterly to congregants who had made pledges to the church.
Piper added that these reports gave people the “straight scoop”
and helped them when it came to filing tax reports.
He retired eight years ago from his job as a document control
supervisor for a manufacturing company, which gave him more time to
give to the church. Piper said volunteering is important to him
because it’s part of being responsible.
“The people that I most admired were always volunteering for
various things besides just going to church,” he said. “I felt if I
weren’t doing something like that, that I wasn’t doing my share.”
Piper said the only thing tiring about his job was balancing
things out and then trying to figure out why one set of numbers
didn’t match another.
“But I’ve always liked working with numbers, and I also became
enamored with computers when they came into being, and computers and
numbers fit together,” he said.
Piper, also a former elder at the church, will continue attending
Harbor Christian as a member.
“He’s been a very significant member and quiet leader,” Short
said.
* YOUNG CHANG is a reporter with Times Community News. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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