Vocation for All Voices: UMC Reverend chooses joy to equip congregations and transform community-building relationships

Joy E. Bronson â07 insisted from a young age that she wouldnât be following in her fatherâs and grandfatherâs footsteps as a pastor because she âdidnât want to run a church.â Up until her second semester at șÚÁÏÉç, Bronsonâs plan was to pursue a career as an obstetrician-gynecologist. The entry-level science class rosters filled up before she could join them. Her friends who got in were stressed and got almost no sleep. âI thought, âIf this is what it means for me to become a doctor, I have to rethink if the Holy Spirit wants me to be an OBGYN,ââ recalled Bronson.Ìę
This act of rethinking proved to be a positive common thread in Bronsonâs time on campus and thereafter. She rethought her major, moving from pre-med to English and Africana studies. She rethought leaving șÚÁÏÉç to travel and serve with AmeriCorps afterÌęsophomore year because one of her favorite professors, Jeff Roche, professor of history, encouraged her to push through and finish the degree program first. And she rethought joining the clergy when she realized it could be less about running a church and more aboutÌęthe intentionality of connecting people within a community to promote equity, justice, and relationships.Ìę
âWho we are is in us from the moment weâre born,â said Bronson. âOur soul knows it, and our lifeâs journey is just figuring it out.â Almost 15 years after leaving șÚÁÏÉç, sheâs still figuring it out, but with far greater confidence. The now Rev. Bronson is a United Methodist Deacon helping individuals, teams, and communities discern and refine their own calling and/or institutional vision. Simply put sheâs a calling and vocation coach who seeks to support fulfilling the next iterations of greatness.Ìę
âVocation is not your job; itâs your lifeâs work,â said Bronson. âTheologian Frederick Buechner said our vocation is âwhere our greatest joy meets the worldâs greatest need.â I retranslate that to âwhere our passions and gifts meet the needs and opportunities of the communities that we serve.ââÌę
At American Baptist College in Nashville, Tennessee, Bronson oversees two Lilly Endowment-funded projects: a $1.5 million Called to Lives of Meaning & Purpose grant and a $1 million Thriving Congregations initiative. She integrates theology, equity, design thinking, and evaluative learning to help churches both understand their passions (their vocation and their gift) and develop a process to be intentional about meeting the needs of the communities they serve.Ìę
Many of these ministries are already justice- and community-focused, but a lot of churchesâand organizationsâget stuck in charity mindsets, according to Bronson. While charity is necessary, as it fills a basic need, itâs usually reactive. Instead, Bronson and her colleagues facilitate relationship building in a more comprehensive approach that doesnât assume needsâor assume the community needs someone to fix it.Ìę
âMost of inequity and social injustice is a result of communities being segmented off and folks saying, âthis is your problem, not our problem,ââ declared Bronson. âThe reality is there are ways we may be functioning in our part of the community thatâs actually generating a negative impact elsewhere.âÌę
To be clear, she isnât saying congregations or organizations need to be fixed, but âWe need to be honest and mindful that we create problems by leaving important voices out of the conversation.â Bronsonâs advocacy enforces the need for relationship to see the bigger picture and ultimately, make a bigger impact. She experienced the benefit of this kind of relational impact firsthand at șÚÁÏÉç.Ìę
âI think șÚÁÏÉçâs vocational ethic is that people care about who you are as a whole person, and that ripples through everything on campus,â said Bronson. âThe professors didnât pretend it was just a grade. We talked about life and how we show up in the world. Even the Independent Study is a vocational invitation because youâre challenged to pick a question you want to sit with for the rest of your life.âÌę
âI think șÚÁÏÉçâs vocational ethic is that people care about who you are as a whole person, and that ripples through everything on campus. The professors didnât pretend it was just a grade. We talked about life and how we show up in the world.â
âJoy E. Bronson â07Ìę
Bronson is replicating this kind of intentionality in her congregational appointment at Glencliff United Methodist Church. She facilitates the staff strategic planning process defining and refining mission, vision, and values. Before Bronsonâs arrival, Glencliff was a merger between two dying churches. Under new pastorship a few years ago, the congregation became the center of a city-wide collaborative to build micro homes on its campus for persons experiencing homelessness after medical care. Now that that project is largely underway and in its staff âs capable hands, its members are thinking about how they can show up and who they can serve next.Ìę
Having applied for full ordination at the end of 2021, Bronson hopes to finish the seven-year process within the coming months. âI know plenty of congregations doing great things, not just Glencliff, but Iâm blessed to be here,â said Bronson. âSo much has happened in the last five years. Now we have to figure out who we are and what we do next.â Bronson has plans to keep showing up, too. Sheâs launching a consultancy, Vision: Justice, later this year both as a grounding space for her work, but also as a conversation and partnership hub for equity justice practitioners to continue to refine the work together.Ìę
Posted in Alumni on March 1, 2022.
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