Resurrection Weekend
Rev. Stephanie Hand leads a "Holy Ghost party" cheer on the LeConte Center stage at thee 38th annual Resurrection spiritual event for youths Jan. 28. (Screengrab courtesy of The Adams Group/ Streamline Productions.)
PIGEON FORGE, Tenn. – A few days after preaching to 4,000 youth and their leaders at Resurrection, the Rev. Stephanie Hand was still in awe of seeing so many young people joyfully worshiping God and responding to his call on their lives.
“It filled me up,” she said in a phone interview from her home in Charlotte, North Carolina. “I experienced something in a grandiose way."
On Jan. 20-22, 195 groups from Holston Conference and beyond poured into LeConte Center in Pigeon Forge for the 38th annual winter spiritual weekend for youth known as Resurrection.
The Friday-night-through-Sunday-morning gathering included four worship sessions spread out through the weekend, with time gaps for youth to discuss the messages and take in tourist attractions with their own small groups. The theme was “One Faith, One Hope, One Lord,” based on Ephesians 4:4-6.
Hand, a United Methodist clergy member of the Western North Carolina Conference, shared her life story while preaching Bible stories with applications to teenagers’ lives, including the prodigal son (Luke 15:11-32), the feeding of the 5,000 (John 6: 1-15), and Israel’s rebellion against God’s promise (Numbers 14: 1-9). She carried a basketball on stage, preached while pacing through the audience, and led youth in “Ain’t no party like a Holy Ghost party” cheers.
Concert crowd
Youths crowd the stage during music by Frvr Free at Resurrection. (Holston Conference Photo by Annette Spence)
“The energy in the room is transformative,” Hand said after a “Holy Ghost” cheer that had students dancing and rushing to the stage. “Does anybody feel God is in the building today?”
Participants were invited to dedicate or re-dedicate their lives to Jesus Christ, resulting in hundreds coming forward. Another invitation to pursue a lifetime call to ministry resulted in about 75 responses, Hand said. (Respondents are encouraged to fill out this form for follow-up support.)
“The data says the church is shrinking, but today I declare and decree that the church might be purging, but God’s church is going to be stronger because of these young people,” Hand said from the stage Saturday night.
Several youth leaders praised the weekend’s message, saying it had reached their youth members.
Picture Time
Youths from Meadowview/ Shady Grove pose for a group photo at Resurrection, the Holston Conference annual youth event. (Photo courtesy of Dalton Richardson)
"I think the spiritual highlight for the group was the Saturday session,” said the Rev. Dalton Richardson, who led 17 participants from Meadowview United Methodist Church (Meadowview, Va.) and Shady Grove United Methodist Church (Abingdon, Va.) “I think the message especially resonated with some of my kids, and a few of us had very fruitful discussions afterward.”
At Keith Memorial United Methodist Church this Sunday, seven people have asked to be baptized and at least four are preparing to become new members in response to last weekend’s Resurrection experience, said the Rev. Melissa Smith, senior pastor at the Athens, Tennessee, church. “I think we’ll have more.”
Sawyer Jaszewski, age 11, said the messages had “deep meaning” for him. “It speaks out a lot about God and how he’s good and how he can turn bad things into good,” said Jaszewki, who attended with Auburn United Methodist Church in Riner, Virginia.
I'm with the Band
Youths line up to get photos with a singer from Frvr Free, the featured band at Resurrection. (Holston Conference Photo by Annette Spence)
The seven-member band Frvr Free from Athens, Georgia, led worship for the first time at Resurrection, with songs including “Beautiful Day (House of the Lord)” and “If You Say So.” The musicians danced, rapped and prayed with students who were allowed to crowd around the stage again after three years of COVID restrictions.
“My group loved it all: The band, speaker and especially being able to go to the stage and worship,” Donna Calhoun posted on Holston’s Facebook page, representing Benton United Methodist Church in Benton, Tennessee.
Sawing Bishop
Bishop Debra Wallace-Padgett (right) puts her hand to the saw during an event at the Holston Conference Resurrection youth gathering. (Screengrab from The Adams Group/ Streamline Productions)
Bishop Debra Wallace-Padgett participated not only by talking with students and celebrating Holy Communion during Sunday’s closing worship. She also took the handle of a giant saw, along with the Rev. Hugh Kilgore, to slice a log during an on-stage activity led by a Resurrection sponsor, Paula Deen’s Lumberjack Feud attraction.
An offering of $7,331 was collected to support the ministry of missionary Militsa De Gyves in translating the Bible for the KaKataibo tribe in Peru’s Amazon jungle.
Talent groups representing each of Holston’s nine districts offered their gifts. Presenters included McFerrin United Methodist Church (Appalachian District) with a black-light hand mime presentation to “Crazy People,” and keyboardist A.J. Cantrell of Floyd United Methodist Church (New River District), singing “Tin Roof.”
Resurrection organizers provided accessibility to people with hearing disabilities through a sign-language interpreter and to Spanish-speakers through translation shared through headphones.
The majority of the 195 youth groups attended from United Methodist churches in Holston, although 23 groups traveled from annual conferences in other states, including Alabama, Kentucky, Michigan, New Jersey, Ohio, South Carolina, and West Virginia, according to Amy Gattis, registrar. Some groups represented Presbyterian, Baptist, Church of God and Church of Christ churches.
A few youth groups attended from Holston churches that have recently voted to disaffiliate from The United Methodist Church. His own church's decision didn't change the experience, said Eli Bray, a young-adult leader of a group from Elm Springs, Old Union, and Lebanon United Methodist Churches in Church Hill, Tennessee.
“There was absolutely no feeling of division when I was there. It wasn’t even mentioned. We were worshiping God, which is all that mattered,” he said.
Bray, whose home church Elm Springs has announced an intent to separate from the denomination, said he answered the call-to-ministry invitation at Resurrection. He plans to pursue his calling in The United Methodist Church.
Presiding at Communion
The Rev. Stephanie Hand, featured speaker, and Holston Conference Bishop Debra Wallace-Padgett celebrate Holy Communion at Resurrection's closing worship. (Holston Conference Photo by Annette Spence)
In a phone interview after the weekend, Hand said the participation of disaffiliating churches was “beautiful and speaks volumes.” She said the disagreements over human sexuality in The United Methodist Church are part of an “adult fight."
“This is an adult fight, and right in the middle of this adult fight about who is in and who is out and why, Resurrection became a safe space where young people could say, ‘I can be myself and be the fullest of myself in this safe space.’ … There is a groundswell of young people saying we want to know Jesus Christ, and we don’t know how to make disciples for the transformation of the world, but we’re ready to lay down our lives for it.”
Resurrection 2023 livestream recordings are available on Vimeo.
Annette Spence serves as editor of The Call, the news journal of the Holston Annual Conference of The United Methodist Church. This article is republished with permission from the conference website. To reproduce this content elsewhere, please contact the author.