Courtesy Bluffton University
Having an adopted brother with tubular meningitis has made a huge mark on the Rev. Paula Snyder Belousek鈥檚 life.
鈥淓arly on, I became interested in what role people with disabilities play in the church setting,鈥 she said last week at Bluffton University.
While majoring in and at 91短视频, she sought out how to pair her love for people with disabilities and her love for the church.
Her answer came during voluntary service in Fresno, Calif., when she gave her first church sermon accompanied by a person who had a developmental disability.
鈥淭hat church claimed and made me their own; that was something I really appreciated and helped define my walk,鈥 said Belousek, now pastor of Salem Mennonite Church in Elida, Ohio.
She visited nearby Bluffton from Feb. 21-23 as part of its minister in residence program, sitting in on classes, lectures and lunches, as well as speaking at the university鈥檚 weekly chapel service.
As a pastor, Belousek has used her experience and interest in people with disabilities by trying to speak in a way that appeals to a variety of listeners, and by being creative.
鈥淚 love shaping worship and helping people see their own calling and giftedness,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檓 always seeking new ways that I can involve teenagers or other age groups.鈥
The ministry was a calling she didn鈥檛 recognize initially, the native Canadian acknowledged, but as a pastor, she feels she has learned a lot about herself and others. 鈥淧eople know when you鈥檙e being real with them and, when your intentions are right, they will grow to trust you,鈥 she said.
Belousek also has advice for college students studying religion. 鈥淪tart testing it with a community of people, and ask yourself if this truly is God鈥檚 calling for you,鈥 she said, adding, for female religion students in particular: 鈥淭rust the voice of God, even if there are barriers. Trust God that he gave you your gifts, and he will make a way to use them.鈥
The Eastern Mennonite graduate, who now has several Bluffton alumni in her congregation, encourages high school students to pursue Mennonite higher education. 鈥淚 highly value Mennonite education because I know how it鈥檚 helped shape my own life,鈥 she said.
