“I am the senior pastor at Springhill Avenue Methodist Church. I dropped the kids off at their daycare and went for a run and trying to decompress from the week. My husband is the youth pastor at Spanish Fort Methodist Church. I prepare sermons far in advance. My outlines are done through Christmas Sunday. It is connected and they all flow. On Monday mornings I read the scripture for the sermon that week and sit with it all week until illustrations come up. I have an idea of where I think it will head, but God surprises me all of the time. I have to be open and follow it. Most illustrations come from my sassy 4-year-old. I recognized my call to the ministry at age 7. I thought I would go into children’s ministry, but when we had our daughter, I was a stay at home mom and after six months , I discovered that I wasn’t good at staying home. I started applying for children’s ministry positions but I was offered the pastor of the church where we had been worshipping for a year. I told him he was crazy, I wasn’t supposed to be a pastor. He gave me 12 hours to think about it. I went to bed thinking no, but woke up and with a sense of peace and went with it. Now I am fully ordained and an elder in the Methodist church. It is not the life I pictured for myself, but I love it now. The hardest part of being a pastor is seeing all of the brokenness in the world and getting other people to care about that, even people who go to church. It is hard and discouraging, but I see God’s hand in it all. Pastors are human just like everyone else, we have gifts and things we are good at and things we aren’t. We are a clergy couple and that could take all of our time, but we have learned how to say no, especially having young kids. We want to have our time with them. I have also learned you have to care for yourself to and do what gives you life.”
I played in enough clubs–I never wanted to have my own
“I'm from Dauphin Island, so my family goes way back. My mother was the oldest girl of 13 children, and all of her...







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