Mr. & Mrs. Harris, Kerygma, YWAM

Mrs. Harris was raised in Mount Pleasant, the daughter of a holiness Pentecostal pastor.
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The next 20 years were filled with marriage, kids and ministry. The newlyweds had moved to southern California, where Harris was from and he joined a business Mrs. Harris’ family had started. Mrs. Harris home-schooled their children and the couple eventually worked in a book business and ministry.

They continued their involvement with missions, pro-life endeavors, their local church and Youth With A Mission. At the time, they also attended a nondenominational church.
But an experience after communion one day prompted Mrs. Harris to look deeper into the practice and the significance of Christ’s body and blood.

Through that, she began to look more closely into Roman Catholicism and particularly the teachings about marriage, because she said she hated her husband at the time.

Harris joined her in the study of the Catholic Church, even though he hadn’t necessarily initiated it. Harris said he always was looking for something different in a church and didn’t exactly know what he was looking for.

After a year of attending classes to convert, the couple converted to Catholicism.

“We didn’t see Catholic as (the) only thing, but for us personally, it kind of was the answer to some other things,” Harris said. “We retained all that we were before as a Christian. We just added being a Catholic.”

Some of their friends in ministry questioned their decision, but Harris didn’t mind.

“We knew it was what God called us to do,” he said.
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Upon entering the Catholic Church though, the couple noticed a ministry opportunity of which they were previously unaware.

Youth With A Mission, more commonly known as YWAM, had a Catholic-oriented ministry called Kerygma. Kerygma is Greek for “proclamation” and, in this case, refers to the proclamation of the Gospel. It emphasizes building unity between Catholics and other Christians.

The Harrises sensed a calling to this ministry, so after an introduction to it and some additional training, they became the co-directors of Kerygma USA. Mrs. Harris had ties to YWAM from her previous training as a young adult so because the ministry new them already, it was a natural fit.

Though Kerygma existed internationally, it had not flourished nationally and the Harrises wanted to change that.

They became full-time staff members, and serve as directors of the Texas and U.S. ministry, living on the financial support of people who believe in their work.

Kerygma’s focus has been to work in evangelization and discipleship of young Catholics so they don’t leave the church. In addition, they focus on learning to walk hand-in-hand with the Protestant community.

It isn’t about being Protestant or Catholic, Mrs. Harris said. It’s about being believers and living in harmony.
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In all of the ministry opportunities, the Harrises encourage participants to fully exercise their Catholic faith.

Harris said he wants the people who participate in their ministry to find the fullness of a relationship with Jesus that he and his wife have found.

He also wants them to know God as the ever present being that He is and be able to communicate His truth with others.

“I want them to go back to their parish and say, ‘Father, how can I help you in the church?’” he said of the youth.

Harris said he and his wife still retain the “fire of youth” in their heart and soul and want to share that with the people they work with. To Mrs. Harris, the work is fulfilling.

“The joy is watching God’s heart be blessed and having satisfaction knowing when God said (in) John 17:21, that they be one, that he didn’t mean that we all have to look alike and believe the same thing,” she said. “He meant that we have to love one another and they will know we are Christians by our love.”

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