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10/29/1995
The marrying
kind Here comes the bride, the groom and Rent a Rev
By Donna Chavez
A re you
legal?" The question blindsided Jim Rehnberg. Friend
and thenNaperville neighbor Ron Smith simply dropped the casual,
yet prophetic, query on an unsuspecting Rehnberg one afternoon
in early 1983.
It was
to be, it turns out,first in a succession of questions Rehnberg
would field in years to come. That watershed moment,a split
second in time, gave way to a vocation he had never imagined.
Today
Jim Rehnberg, a 42-year-old resident of Geneva, is a professional
wedding chaplain, a full-time matrimonial minister, if you
will. He is a shepherd whose flock is the betrothed, a pastor
whose sanctuary can be a grove in the forest preserve, a sky
box at Wrigley Field or a gondola atop the Navy Pier Ferris
wheel. He sets no heavenly or earthly limits on where he will
go to join folks in wedlock.
Rehnberg
also works part time for Resource Alliance Inc., a mediation
consulting firm. in Geneva. His wife of 20 years, Margy, owns
a Geneva women's clothing store called Charisma. They have
two children; Chad, 18, is a student at Liberty University
in Lynchburg, Va., and Charissa, 17, is a senior at Geneva
High School.
Gayle
Hinsberger, owner of a Naperville wedding consulting business,
The Wedding Center, cant say enough good things about Jim.
He is so good at what he does. He takes a very personal interest
in the [ engaged ] couple, applies his very special gifts
and creates a ceremony they will nerver forget.
It was
those very special gifts that Ron and Lydia Smith, now of
Elgin, sought for their May '83 wedding in the little pagoda
at Fabyan Forest Preserve in Batavia. Yet Rehnberg recalled
when Smith first broached the subject:- "I didnt know
if he was serious or joking. We had been talking about his
upcoming wedding."
Smith,
Rehnberg said, "knew I was, had been, an ordained minister,
but it never occurred to me that he wanted to know if I could
legally perform his marriage ceremony. Very nearly the last
thing on Rehnberegs mind that fateful day in 1983 was his
formed religious calling. Sure, he had a bachelors degree
in biblical studies from Wheaton College and a master, of
divinity degree from Bethel Seminary- in St. Paul. Yes. he
had pastored a small evangelical free church in St. Paul for
nearly six years.
..Yet in 1983 Rehnberg was in the middle of a five-year occupational
odyssey. In 1980. he said, he began to ask some serious career
questions. With a wife and two small children, the life of
a mendicant was unfulfilling in every aspect.
"When
I got a raise in 1980 to $210 a week. I felt not only a spiritual
and emotional but a financial emptiness in my life. he said.
He and Margy prayed for direction, and Rehnberg retired from
the ministry. In 1982. they moved to Naperville, where Rehnberg's
father-in-law operated a business.
Between
1980 and 1985, he said, "I sold industrial diamonds.
I did religious fundraising for Living Bibles International.
I sold life insurance."
From '85
until '94. Rehnberg worked for his father-in-law as a manufacturer's
representative selling gas station equipment while moonlighting
as a freelance matrimonial minister. Last year Rehnberg's
avocation went full time when his father-in-law closed the
agency.
...However,
in 1983, "I thought my ministerial days were over,".Rehnberg
said. "but when Ron asked me to marry them, I couldn't
refuse.
Friends
who attended that ceremony urged Rehnberg to pursue a career
officiating at weddings. Hinsberger, a neighbor, dubbed him
Reverend Jim. a tongue-in-cheek reference to the Chrislopher
Lloyd character on the TV show "Taxi," and helped
launch his new career.
What surprised
Rehnberg was how much delight he took in performing nuptials.
No longer the retired clergyman, this incurable curate had
found his calling. Hie said he truly enjoys "being there
for the God issues, the interpersonal issues associated with
marriage.
"So
Gayle and I went to Wedding trade shows," he said. "and
I passed out my cards. She wrote a story about me in her [now
defunct) wedding magazine. I married two couples who were
in the wedding business. That gave me tremendous visibility."
Word spread.
Although Rehnberg is unwilling to talk numbers, he confessed
to 13 marriage ceremonies that first year. By 1986 the number
jumped to 150.
He also
demurs to questions about money but admitted, "When I
first started, my fee was ,$75--until I learned bartenders
[ at weddings ] were paid four times that amount. "On
average he meets with the couple once for a comprehensive
interview, then sees them again at the wedding rehearsal.
"I'll
meet with them more often if it helps reduce their anxiety
level," he said. though once is usually enough.
On a recent
weekend Rehnberg had six weddings, five rehearsals and one
prewedding meeting. His time is frequently booked months in
advance Despite the harried schedule. Hinsberger said, each
couple feels as though their wedding is the only one he performs.
It is what sets him apart from other ministers.
Marty
and Linda Allamian of Wayne attest to that. Their July wedding
on the lawn at Pheasant Run Resort in St. Charles not only
captivated the assembled 200 invited guests, it also attracted
an additional 200 or so resort guests, according to Linda.
"People
came up to us afterward, people we didn't even know. They
asked where we met Jim and how long we knew him. Truth is,
we'd met a few weeks before the ceremony." Linda said.
"But he made us feel like ours was the only wedding he's
ever performed, like we were old friends."
Rehnberg
relishes the opportunity to be a part of his clients families
on their special day. His body language says I-love-what-I
do more loudly than his words. "I get to be adopted for
the day," he said with palpable enthusiasm. Others see
it and respond.
Victor
and Lori Johnston of Naperville had a list of ministers to
chose from for their July wedding. Rehnberg's name was first
on the list, and they planned to interview everyone. Victor
said.
He recalled,
"I went into the interview [with Rehnberg] skeptical.
When we left his house, I said to Lori, 'We gotta have him!
Forget the others." They threw away tile list.
Two of
Rehnberg's very special qualities, according to Sharon Braden
of Glen Ellyn. are innate common sense and flexibility. He
molds each ceremony to the specific personal needs of the
couple. Rehnberg united Sharon, a retired bridal shop owner,
and husband Bob 11 years ago.
"He
bothers to get to know who you are, not in a superficial way.
His interest is genuine. As a result, each ceremony is very
personal." Braden said.
He talked
about our childhood during the service as if he'd known us
all our lives, as if he'd known our families all their lives,"
said Victor Johnston. who recently moved to Naperville to
become general manager of Outback Steakhouse.
Hinsberger
said, "There is a demand for his service because this
area has so many recently relocated people."
In the
busy-ness of their daily lives, they don't have a church membership.
It is, she said a standard requisite in most religions for
a wedding ceremony.
Rehnberg
sees the wedding day as a link between past and future "A
wedding is only one day, Marriage is forever. Our expectations
for marriage are rooted in our past, how our parents marriage
was," he said. Therefore he asks a lot of questions when
he meets with couples. "Then I can draw both families
into the ceremony. Because, although we say vows to only,
one person, we are really marrying the whole family."
he said.
He never
asks the traditional speak-nowor-forever-hold- your-peace
question. Instead Rehnberg asks. "Do you as family and
friends give your blessing and affirmation to this couple?
Will you please offer them advice based on your wisdom and
years of experience?" He pauses. "But not until
they ask for it?"
"That
usually gets a laugh and helps break down barriers,"
Rehnberg said. "particularly with intercultural marriages."
Intercultural
and interfaith weddings are a kind of specialty for Rehnberg
because couples generally prefer a neutral location over choosing
one religion or the other. Another specialty is marrying couples
who, for one reason or another, are not official members of
a church.
"My
clients are often folks who hate very deep religious roots
but may have fallen away from organized religion," Rehnberg
said. This Son of a Swedish Baptist minister says he can identify
because his own roots are deep; "I have a little hole
in my head into which only a Baptist funnel will fit:"
He is currently a member of Christ Community Church St. Charles.
Braden,
who has referred many couples to him, said Rehnberg is highly
respected by traditional pastoral ministers across religious
lines. He sees himself not in competition with them so much
as supplementing their work.
Rev. Bill
Yaccino. director of the single-adult ministry at Christ Community
Church in St. Charles. says, "If we can't perform a wedding
service for one reason or another, I don't hesitate to refer
the couple to Jim."
Weddings
aren't the only ceremonies he performs. Sharon Braden knows
people he has married who ask him to baptize their babies.
At the specific request of one bride's grandmother, Rehnberg
recently officiated at her funeral service. Hinsberger called
on him to perform the memorial service when her son died in
a snowmobile accident.
Rehnberg
or Rent-A-Rev, as friends fondly call him, has carved a niche
for himself and his God-given gifts. He is a sort of romantic
Paladin preacher, a bridal bounty hunter who cleans up after
Cupid.
"Love
is a decision. You don't fall in love. You decide to love,
he said. Marriage is also a decision.
A few
months ago the phone in Rehnberg's office rang. A voice asked.
"Reverend, how do you feel about heights?" Several
weeks later, he was in a gondola perched high atop the Navy
Pier Ferris wheel while a jubilant couple exchanged vows.
What's
next? "Well. I haven't performed any hot tub weddings
yet. He quipped.
Don't ask.
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