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Helping people from womb to tomb

Daycare students Michael (left) and Aiden play together at Bethlehem Centers. Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News.
Daycare students Michael (left) and Aiden play together at Bethlehem Centers. Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News.
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When Steve Fleming, chief executive officer of Bethlehem Centers of Nashville, began coming to the center for immunizations at the age of 4, it was the beginning of a lifelong relationship.

Steve Fleming visits with daycare students Malakhai (left) and Melody at Bethlehem Centers of Nashville (Tenn.) Fleming is the center’s chief executive officer. Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News. 
Steve Fleming visits with daycare students Malakhai (left) and Melody at Bethlehem Centers of Nashville (Tenn.) Fleming is the center’s chief executive officer. Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News.

Fleming’s mother sent him first to the center’s child care, then its after-school programs, then he began volunteering. His first paid opportunity came at 14.

Other than his time at college — for which Bethlehem Centers secured him a full scholarship — he’s never really left. After a year as interim director, he became the permanent director in 2014.

“The Lord aligned my stars perfectly,” he said. “I knew this would be something I wanted to do for a living.”

Fleming’s experience is not unique. It’s part of what he calls the center’s “womb-to-tomb” mission.

The long list of programs the center offers includes child care, after-school and teaching programs for K-10, summer vocational programs, recreation and life skills development, as well as an array of activities for seniors, community outreach projects and Meals on Wheels deliveries.

The Nashville center is celebrating its 127th year, growing out of a partnership between two women, Sallie Hill Sawyer and Estelle Haskins, who sought to impact the lives of others and provide essential services for the working poor.

It’s a national mission institution of United Methodist Women, one of approximately 90 funded by the agency and one of several Bethlehem Centers with that designation. Located throughout the U.S., national mission institutions are ministries with the poor, communities, families and all age groups.

Your support of the World Service Fund apportionment supports program-related general agencies, which are especially important to the common vision, mission, and ministry of The United Methodist Church.

Malachi Carey is a student in the Vocational Success Institute, a summer employment program for youth at Bethlehem Centers of Nashville. Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News. 
Malachi Carey is a student in the Vocational Success Institute, a summer employment program for youth at Bethlehem Centers of Nashville. Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News.

The North Nashville neighborhood that the center serves has among the highest levels of both poverty and incarceration in the United States.

A report generated by a municipal committee considering ways to help cited the need for community resource centers and youth development among its top priorities.

Programs like Bethlehem Centers’ Vocational Success Institute aim to reach young teens at an age where they may be susceptible to making bad choices that could derail their future.

Malachi Carey, 16, joined the program at 14, working in the kitchen for Meals on Wheels, serving as a front-desk greeter and helping with children. This summer, he worked in the campus community garden.

“This place helped me a lot. I used to do bad stuff, used to steal. They helped me grow, got me working to earn my own money so I didn’t need to steal,” he said.

Carey said that in the future, he’d like to work with kids and “help them like Mr. Steve helped me.”

Janet Reyes is another Bethlehem Centers “alumna” who began participating in children’s programs when she was 5. Now, she’s a staff youth specialist who helps tutor kids.

The center’s Meals on Wheels program serves up to 216 meals five days a week, delivered daily with a smile courtesy of Roy Reed, who has been a delivery driver for Bethlehem Centers since 1996.

"Meals on Wheels driver Roy Reed hugs Frances Hereford after bringing lunch prepared by staff and volunteers at Bethlehem Centers. Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News. 
"Meals on Wheels driver Roy Reed hugs Frances Hereford after bringing lunch prepared by staff and volunteers at Bethlehem Centers. Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News.

Not content to just drop off the meals, Reed stays and talks, takes out trash. He may even pick up groceries or take mail to the post office.

When he was in the 10th grade, Reed was part of the center’s Say Yes to Success program, which guides middle-school students in making positive life choices and developing goals for promising futures.

“The program kept my head on straight,” he said. “I grew up in a single-parent home without a father, and Mr. Steve is like a father to me.”

Perhaps no one better exhibits the “womb-to-tomb” mission than Yvonne Franklin. If not for Bethlehem Centers, she might not have been born: Her parents met there as children.

She also met her husband when he was serving as a counselor at a camp where Bethlehem Centers held summer programs.

Franklin retired in 2013 and served as a caregiver for her sister. After her sister’s passing, Franklin said she was “just sitting at home all day depressed” until someone recommended Bethlehem Centers’ Silver and Gold Senior Club.

“It’s been a blessing. Bethlehem Centers was the only thing around here when I was growing up, so I found I already knew half the people here anyway,” she said.

“We’re proud to be part of a ministry connecting people to hope,” Fleming said.

It’s the sunshine of my day — I get up every morning on fire knowing I’m coming to a place where we spread love, offer hope and help.”

excerpt from a story by Joey Butler, multimedia producer/editor, United Methodist News.

The World Service Fund provides basic financial support to program-related general agencies, which are especially important to the common vision, mission, and ministry of The United Methodist Church. Through World Service funding, agencies support annual conferences and local congregations in living out God’s mission for the worldwide Church. General agencies also provide essential services and ministries beyond the scope of individual local congregations and annual conferences through services and ministries that are highly focused, flexible, and capable of rapid response.

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