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This is the fourth installment of a yearlong series that will follow newly appointed United Methodist clergy as they begin their ministry.
A UMNS Feature
By Aaron Cross*
7:00 A.M. EST Jan. 4, 2011
Bishop James R. King, Jr. resident bishop of South Georgia Episcopal
Area, commissions Stacy Harwell during a ceremony in The UGA Tifton
Campus
Conference Center. A UMNS web-only photo by Mike Davis.
God’s plan for Stacey Harwell came as a surprise to her.
“If you would have told me at the beginning of my time in college
that I was going to be ordained in the Methodist Church, I would have
laughed at you!” said the Rev. Harwell, 25, a deacon at Centenary United
Methodist Church in Macon, Georgia.
Harwell’s call into ministry didn’t lead to a pulpit but rather to a
ministry that has “one foot in the world and one foot in the church.”
“My calling to be a deacon in The United Methodist Church came during
my first year at Candler (School of Theology),” she said. “Among the
many things I loved in the ministry was campus ministry and working with
the homeless.”
The Rev. Andy Peabody, a deacon who works with families and
individuals in crisis, helped Harwell through some “tough theological
shifts” and to hear her call to work with the disenfranchised.
“When I met more deacons who all seemed to do the breadth of
ministries I was interested in, I was hooked. I wanted to be a deacon.”
Changing hearts
Harwell always wanted to help people “see a God who wanted to help them,” she said.
That led her to Mercer University in Macon where she studied to become a journalist.
At that time she was more focused on, “changing people’s hearts
through a great article that exposed them to a new way of thinking or to
a dire condition that needed their money or time.”
She wrote for the school’s student newspaper, working her way up to be the editor of the features section.
“We did a lot of in-depth stories on diversity at my university,” she
said, “I was also the ‘religion beat’ reporter although we didn't have a
section on religion. When I dreamed of what I wanted to do outside of
college, I thought perhaps of working at a magazine like Time or
Newsweek, writing articles on religion and trying to become an editor
there as well.”
Though she was active in campus ministry, it was only after looking
back on the experiences that she had working in the church, exploring
questions in the Bible and planning worship services that she realized
that God was calling her to walk away from journalism.
“Getting into ministry was really more of a gradual process for me rather than a ‘Boom, here it is’ moment,” Harwell said.
While writing her senior paper for journalism she had her “aha”
moment when she realized her passion for ministry could be a vocation.
She went to Emory University’s Candler School of Theology in Atlanta to
become ordained as a deacon.
“What struck me in that, ‘Why am I doing this?’ moment was just how
much ministry had come to mean in my life and just how much I loved
doing it. I really felt like God had used me in some significant ways.
It was a humbling realization and an acceptance of a job that I was
already doing.”
Building relationships
Stacy Harwell, second from left, works in the Beall’s Hill Community Garden which is co-sponsored by Centenary
United Methodist Church. A UMNS web-only photo by
Maryann Bates courtesy of the Gateway Initiative.
At Centenary United Methodist Church, she is the minister of
community building. Her job is to foster relationships both inside and
outside of the church.
As part of her duties, she collaborates with the director of the
church’s community-ministries program to work at getting men off the
streets into a drug-free, alcohol-free house and on a path to stability.
She also works out ways to serve 200 plates of breakfast to hungry people on Sunday mornings.
“In many ways, I am the representative of the church in the world,
but I bring an entire congregation with me to every community meeting.”
Beyond the community building, she does other tasks within the
church, such as teaching Sunday school classes, planning worship and
providing leadership during the service. She also preaches about once a
month, oftentimes speaking on the wideness of God’s mercy and social
justice. She uses stories and Bible verses to help those who are
voiceless find “a God who is on their side.”
“I love my job,” Harwell said. “I can’t believe that a church that at
one point was dying (we had 35 people in this church on average about
six years ago and now we are up to 150 on average at the 11 a.m.
service) can now afford to hire a full-time deacon to do community
building.
“This church has incredible leadership, and I am so fortunate to be
able to learn from them. Even on bad days when the world seems bent
against the people I serve, I love that my job exists to say, ‘Listen
up! These people deserve to be heard and to be treated like the children
of God they are.’”
*Cross is a freelance writer in Nashville, Tenn.
News media contact: Kathy L. Gilbert, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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