The Rev. Susan Phillips says she is “grateful for my colleagues in the neighborhood and our collaborative partnerships.”
Phillips, 57, pastor of Springfield’s First Presbyterian Church, added, “I’m so grateful for companions on the town which are all centered on the well being and welfare of the broader neighborhood.”
Phillips, a local of Springfield, Missouri, grew to become the primary lady and fifteenth pastor to steer the 196-year-old church in 2017.
She has guided the 275-member downtown congregation because it welcomes full participation of LGBTQ individuals in its ministry, works with different teams to function a meals pantry, fights prejudice by way of the Springfield Coalition on Dismantling Racism, and financially helps Serving to Palms of Springfield and the Springfield Immigrant Advocacy Community.
The church is within the midst of a significant reworking venture, costing roughly $7 million, that’s anticipated to be accomplished in April 2025. The venture is meant to make the constructing extra accessible and accessible to the general public and neighborhood organizations.
Phillips, the daughter of a mom who taught public-school college students and a father who labored for the county well being division in Missouri, sees her work contained in the church and in the neighborhood as an extension of her Christian religion.
“All the things I be taught from the Bible focuses on love and justice,” Phillips stated. “That’s the faith of Jesus and the main target of His ministry.”
Phillips stated that “trusting in God’s love for us” and “searching for justice for the remainder of the world” motivates her and others from First Presbyterian, the place Abraham Lincoln and his household worshiped, to make Springfield a greater place.
“We actually imagine each individual is made within the picture of God,” she stated.
Phillips just lately was appointed to the 14-member Massey Fee, an all-volunteer group that’s working within the wake of the July 6 police-involved taking pictures dying of Sonya Massey to search out methods of restoring belief in legislation enforcement and addressing the various social-justice points linked to Massey’s dying.
“There’s been a lot trauma in the neighborhood since July, and earlier than July as effectively,” Phillips stated.