After years of hesitation, Natchez native enters Austin seminary

Published 12:00 am Sunday, June 10, 2001

A great joy filled Tim Brown’s heart when he finally said yes to God. After many years of hesitation, including questions about his own worthiness, he realized a few years ago the time had come for him to enter a seminary.

Now, at 34, Brown soon will begin his third year at Austin Theological Seminary in Austin, Texas, with confidence that he has made the right choice for his life.

A Natchez native, Brown is typical of many seminarians today, choosing ministry after spending time in another career. &uot;Probably 60 percent of us at Austin Seminary are second-career seminarians,&uot; Brown said, as he relaxed in the peaceful quiet of the Westminster Presbyterian Church sanctuary and talked about his faith journey.

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For the summer, Brown is back in his hometown, interning at Westminster under the supervision of David deVries, pastor at First Presbyterian. &uot;This is a tremendous opportunity for me. I’m getting a lot of practical experience, more than I might receive in another situation; and I’m learning to discipline myself, prioritize my time to prepare worship services and Bible studies,&uot; Brown said.

So with his family – wife, Le, and two young sons, Bash and Ben – he has moved home, received warmly by a congregation that was not his home church as he grew up in Natchez but includes some old friends.

The journey that led him to ministry began with a firm foundation provided by his family and the church family at Grace United Methodist Church.

&uot;My parents had a desire to make sure we grew up in a Christian family,&uot; he said. Further, the Rev. Pete Herndon, then pastor at Grace Church, encouraged him to consider the ministry. &uot;I began thinking about it, but I wasn’t ready,&uot; he said.

After graduating from the University of Mississippi, where he followed in his father’s footsteps as a football player, Brown accepted a job with Waste Management in Vicksburg. There he married Le and through her became involved in the Presbyterian church. &uot;Then we moved to Brandon for a short time. I became involved in a new Presbyterian development in Madison, and the minister there also asked if I’d considered the ministry. I was still searching,&uot; he said.

By that time he had changed jobs, working with a home health company. The job allowed the family to live wherever they wanted to live. &uot;We moved back to Vicksburg. We had been so fond of that church, and that was Le’s hometown. I became really involved in church work.&uot;

Steve Bryant, pastor at the Vicksburg church, called one day to invite Brown to go fishing the next morning. &uot;I knew what he wanted to talk about, and I told Le that Steve was going to talk to me about the ministry. She told me she’d support me in whatever I wanted to do. It’s not easy. Her words were reassuring and reaffirming to me.&uot;

Sure enough Bryant pressed the point. &uot;He asked me, ‘What are you doing with your life, Tim Brown?’&uot; As the conversation continued, Brown realized the time had come to say yes. In the fall of 1999 he entered seminary.

&uot;It was a release, a joy, a contentment I had never felt. I was not in Tim Brown’s frame of reference anymore but in God’s.&uot;

Two years of study behind him, Brown finds that he has grown more contemplative. His faith in Jesus Christ grows exponentially, he said.

&uot;I’ve seen how Christ has changed people’s lives. It’s a mystery that God loves us so much to do that,&uot; he said.

&uot;I’ve learned in seminary how carefully and completely God holds us in the palms of his hands and how incredible it is that he would extend his grace to us.&uot;

With graduation a year away, Brown has thought about his hopes for the future but said he will go where God calls him to go. &uot;I’ll try to stay on my faith journey to make sure I fulfill God’s purpose for me.&uot;