Patricia J.
Phillips serves as a pastor and co-founder of Abundant Life Ministries.
She is the fifth of six children of the late Ray and Grace Wheeler
Buckallew of Centerville, Iowa.
Patricia grew up in a small southeastern Iowa community in which
farming and coal mining were the main industries. She could identify to
some degree with the country music singer Loretta Lynn, in that she was a
coal miners daughter.
It was in the years after the untimely death of her father when
Patricias strong character was being forged; she was only six when he
passed away. Both she and her husband were raised during the Great
Depression years of the 1930s by single parents with large families.
Times were difficult for the Grace Buckallew family; Mrs. Buckallew did
a very outstanding job working outside the home and keeping the family
together. All six children completed their education and became recognized
in the marketplace as achievers. They chose to use the tough times as a
motivation to develop a strong work ethic. Patricia learned homemaking
skills from her mother and became very efficient in secretarial skills,
which later earned her a place as an executive secretary with an
investment brokerage firm in Kansas City, Missouri.
In 1951-two years after Patricias marriage to Wilson Phillips-their
first child, Stephen, was born. Five years had past since the ending of
World War II. Traditional family values of the Judeo-Christian culture
were changing rapidly. In many households both parents were working
outside the home. This brought the American people the highest standard of
living of any nation on earth.
While raising their three children, the Phillips chose to do without
some material things so that they could live on a single income. By many
peoples standards, their life-style was "old-fashioned."
Patricia made a commitment to Jesus Christ in 1962 but struggled in her
faith because her husband remained uncommitted to the Lord. Nevertheless,
she stayed faithful and was overjoyed when her husband made his commitment
in 1965.
This joy in the Lord was disturbed in 1966 when her husband announced
the Lord had revealed his calling to full-time Christian service. Some
fears and insecurities began to surface in her of which she had previously
been unaware. Now sixteen years into her marriage she felt threatened at
the thought of giving up her house, her husbands railroad position, and
all the "stuff" they had accumulated. The American dream she had
envisioned seemingly was being scuttled by her husbands talk of
"leaving all" to follow the Lord.
As the summer of 1967 arrived, the Phillips relocated to
Springfield, Missouri. With her husband entering Central Bible College,
Patricia moved out of the role of full-time homemaker into a dual role as
homemaker-secretary; she was employed at the International Headquarters of
the General Council of the Assemblies of God. With three children and a
husband in school, she worked an unbelievable schedule from early morning
until late at night. Her homemaking skills were lifesavers to the family.
Proverbs 31 would describe her many faceted duties of sewing, washing,
ironing, cooking, cleaning, shopping, and typing her husbands term
papers. All of this was in addition to her 40 hours at her secretarial
job.
Patricia felt she could have a breathing spell upon her receiving her
"P.H.T." Her husbands degree was a bachelor of arts in Bible,
while hers was a well-earned "Putting-Hubby-Through" degree.
Patricias faith had been severely tested through the Springfield
chapter of her life. Besides the rigorous work schedule, her family had
been hit by some rebellious activities of her teenage daughter.
The Lord led the Phillips to an Assemblies of God pioneer church in
Sedalia, Missouri, in the summer of 1970. This was to be their
"Arabian Desert Experience." As a pastors wife, Patricia
worked alongside her husband in the church, and they also developed a
coffeehouse ministry for troubled teenagers. Her horizons were broadened
by exposure to the "Charismatic movement" as well as the
"hippie-type" young people. The rebellious sixties and seventies
of the Vietnam War era posed quite a challenge to her conservative
disciplined upbringing. God was providentially preparing her for the
greatest challenge in her ministry.
It was a real shock to Patricia when the Lord led her family back into
the Springfield area in 1975 to pastor the Republic assembly of God
Church. The years of schooling and pioneer church service had taken its
toll financially. She found herself back at the General Council
Headquarters in secretarial work to help with the family expenses. She
terminated her service in 1982 when the Lord spoke that she and her
husband were to move into the city of Springfield with their ministry. The
Lords word was that "He had set a great open door before
them
" but like the apostle Paul in Scripture, they faced many
adversaries.
The foreknowledge of Gods leading was unveiled in 1983 when Abundant
Life Ministries was formed. The Kingdom principles that God was revealing
to Patricia included her being ordained by the presbytery of Abundant Life
Ministries in 1986. God was recognizing and releasing her pastoral role in
her own right. At the insistence of some of the elders, she was to take
the title Pastor Phillips and her husband was to take the biblical title
of Bishop Phillips (overseer of pastors). These titles still at times
sound strange to a coal miners daughter and a pioneer Pentecostal
preachers son.
A comment that came to Bishop Phillips from Father Richard Bartlett, a
Catholic priest and friend, seems appropriate in depicting Pastor
Phillips role at Abundant Life ministries: "I believe every parish
needs a womans input."
The elders at Abundant Life Ministries recognized the need and set in
order Pastor Phillips ministry to follow the pattern given to the older
women in Titus 2:3-5: "
be reverent in behavior, not slanderers,
not given to much wine, teachers of good things - that they admonish the young women to love their husbands, to love
their children, to be discreet, chaste, homemakers
." Those in the
Abundant Life family see Pastor Phillips as their spiritual mother and
follow her example as she faithfully tends to her spiritual home.
Proverbs 31:31 seems appropriate in summarizing Pastor Phillips
ministry. "Give her the fruit of her hands, and let her own works
praise her in the gates."