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UM Bishop tells of a lifetime of scouting experiences
When Will
Willimon worked with his pastor on the God and Country Award, it’s doubtful that
either of them would have guessed that the youngster would later become a bishop
in the United Methodist Church. However, it was that experience that was
instrumental in the bishop’s call to the ministry.
Willimon
later attained the rank of Eagle, and he called the attainment “a great moment
in my life.”
“I loved
scouting,” the bishop told UM Men magazine. “The work I did with my
pastor on my God and Country award was instrumental in my call to the ministry.
Later, I served as an assistant scoutmaster of an inner-city scout troop and got
to see the good effects of scouting on a group of at risk boys who greatly
needed the lessons that scouting teach so well. Still later, I was active in my
son's troop, taking them to scout camp one summer. My son made me proud when he
earned his Eagle award and his God and Country Award too. Scouting is a
wonderful program.”
The Rev.
Dr. William H. Willimon was elected to the episcopacy in 2004 and was assigned
to the Birmingham Area. As bishop of the North Alabama Conference he presides
over UM congregations with some 157,000 members and 792 pastors.
Prior to
his election, he served as dean of the chapel and professor of Christian
ministry at Duke University, Durham, N.C. (1989 to 2004). He also held several
teaching positions at Duke and served churches in Georgia and South Carolina.
The
bishop is a graduate of Wofford College (B.A., 1968), Yale Divinity School (M.Div.,
1971) and Emory University (S.T.D., 1973).
He is the
author of over fifty books and 600 scholarly articles and has given lectures and
taught courses at many pastors' schools and at colleges and universities around
the world.
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