Web Exclusives: Alumni Spotlight
Stanfield,
pastor of Fourth Presbyterian Church, with his wife, Lorraine
Dudley Stanfield '83, a doctor at a nearby community health
center, and their children.
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April 9, 2003:
Ministering
to South Boston
Urban pastor Burns
Stanfield '82 helps low-income neighbors
As minister of Fourth Presbyterian Church in low-income, working
class South Boston, Burns Stanfield '82 is part preacher, part community
activist, part social worker, and part counselor.
Since he took over as pastor in 1991, the congregation has grown
from 25 to about 120 members. But his church, located in the Andrew
Square neighborhood, serves hundreds more every year through its
programs, including a free summer day camp, youth groups, a food
pantry, music and art classes, and tutoring. Most of children and
adults who participate in those programs are not members of the
church.
After earning a master of divinity from Harvard Divinity School,
Stanfield knew he wanted to work in an urban neighborhood. "I
wanted to be a part of a community. I wanted to be part of an area
where there could be a sense of being connected to neighbors. ...
And I knew I felt a call to be with an underserved area, an area
that needed support that was important to me."
The church stands between two housing projects, and a third is
close by. In the last 10 years, he says, people from all over the
world have moved in from China, Latin America, Haiti, Vietnam,
Afghanistan. "It's like the U.N.," he says. Most of the
children in his programs live in the projects and the church serves
people of all faiths, not just Presbyterians. "It's one of
the poorest areas of the city," says Stansfield.
Over the years he and members of the congregation have advocated
for affordable housing, living wages and health care for janitors,
and better relations between teenagers and police officers. Currently,
as some developers are moving into South Boston, erecting high-end
condos and commercial space, Stansfield is part of an impact advisory
group that is trying to ensure that developers in South Boston "respect"
and "treat with sensitivity" local low-income residents.
"We're always worrying about squeezing low-income people out,"
he says.
Stanfield, a Woodrow Wilson School major at a Princeton who was
active in Triangle, the Jazz Ensemble, and Student Volunteers Council,
had been thinking of becoming a minister all through college. After
dabbling for a few years after graduation volunteering in
Kentucky at a home for disadvantaged kids and then working for a
lawyer in L.A. while performing with a mime troupe made up of Princeton
friends he enrolled at Harvard Divinity School, where he
now teaches preaching and Presbyterian polity. After graduation,
he entertained "one more interruption" he toured
with the band Scruffy the Cat, playing organ and piano, for two
years before joining Fourth Presbyterian.
The church's programs, particularly those geared toward children
in the community, provide a safety net. "We'll have kids who'll
connect with the church, and they'll be from horrific family situations
but then somebody else in the congregation will end up being a foster
parent for them for a while," says Stansfield.
Stanfield has seen some people turn their lives around with help
from members of the congregation. He hired a former alcoholic to
teach one of the art classes. "He poured himself into teaching
kids art," says Stanfield. He eventually found a job, married,
and is expecting his first child. A teenager who had been "running
with a gang" got involved with the church and found a mentor
in Stansfield and another member of the church. After serving time
in prison, he has left gang life and will graduate from high school.
"It feels like a miracle," says Stanfield.
His congregation, says Stansfield, "isn't just a community
center where I log in my hours. I'm friend with these folks. I'm
connected to people's lives and I get to see kids grow up."
Serving the community seems to run in Stanfield's family. His
wife, Lorraine Dudley Stanfield '83, an internist who teaches medical
students at Boston University School of Medicine, is a staff physician
at a community health center in nearby Dorchester, where the Stanfield's
live. Lorraine also sings in Fourth Presbyterian's choir, and the
Stanfield's three children attend Sunday school and sing in the
children's choir.
One challenge ahead for him and the congregation is raising money
for an addition to the church. With the new space, he wants to develop
an after-school program for the kids in the projects. So far he
has raised $300,000 toward a goal of $1.3 million.
About his work with South Boston's poor and diverse population,
he says, "I love that it feels that it makes a difference."
By K.F.G.
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