Reviving OurFree Methodist Alumni and °”ÍűTV Students Embrace the Cause
that Launched Our Founding Church
âWherever we see inequities, we are required to be engaged in that struggle.â
âIâm a missionary to a problem, not a place ⊠Slavery is everywhere.â

Kevin Austin â84 with children in Manila, Philippines, where Set Free Movement and International Child Care Ministries support education and human trafficking prevention projects for children

°”ÍűTV students ran in the Free Them 5K, to raise money for ’s anti-trafficking programs, and race participants wrote messages of prayer and support for trafficking survivors (pictured).
â... the sentiment of our students responding is: âEnough is enough!ââ

Entrepreneur Jessica Watson (below) and °”ÍűTV senior Summer Downs are at work on the launch of TK Threads, an employment opportunity for survivors and those at risk of being trafficked.

They stood up and said âNo more!â to inequality in the Methodist Episcopal church. They insisted that no one should have to pay to sit in a church pew. They opposed slavery. They sought to revive the Wesleyan convictions of the denominationâs 18th-century founders, especially care for the poor. They embraced the gospelâs message of equality.
And the Methodist Church of the mid-1800s kicked them out.
So, led by a pastor and visionary named B.T. Roberts, they went on to put the âFreeâ in Free Methodism, founding a new denomination. Doug Strong, dean of °”ÍűTV’s School of Theology, sums up Robertsâ vision like this: âWherever we see inequities, we are required to be engaged in that struggle.â
Robertsâ vision involved establishing educational institutions, including Seattle Seminary, which would become Seattle Pacific. âRoberts did not want only Bible-training schools,â Strong says. âHe said specifically that he wanted Christian liberal arts colleges in order to produce the next generation of people able to speak into the needs of the culture from the perspective of the gospel.â

Above: Early Free Methodists pose with founder B.T. Robertsâ
portrait at their general conference in 1893. Image: Marston Memorial Historical Center Right: The first
issue of The Free Methodist was published January 9, 1868.
(It became Light & Life Magazine in 1970 and is still published under that name.) Image: Light & Life Communications.
In Rediscovering an Evangelical Heritage (the new second edition), Strong writes that millennials, âlike their antecedents in the 1840s and the 1970sâ are âseeking an integration of their commitment to Christ with their social activism. ... Millennials are passionate regarding God and compassionate regarding the needs of the world. They demand a focus on Jesus and justice — a holistic biblical faith.â
It was that holistic vision that opened the eyes of Free Methodist missionary Kevin Austin â84 to the reality of global human trafficking.
Serving in Thailand in 2001, Austin was distraught to learn that the city of Pattaya, âjust down the road,â was a major global center of âsex tourism.â He investigated the scale of the exploitation and, in 2005, wrote to the superintendent for the Free Methodist Churchâs Pacific Northwest Conference — Matt Whitehead â79 — and other Free Methodist clergy. âBasically, I said, âWeâre Free Methodists! What are we going to do about modern slavery?ââ
Working with Whitehead, Austin drafted a resolution to bring before the 2007 Free Methodist General Conference. After committees and leaders collaborated on revisions, the resolution passed unanimously — 250 to zero. Thus it became the first modern church-denomination resolution against human trafficking and the foundation for the Free Methodist Churchâs .
Austin remains a full-time Free Methodist missionary, educating and equipping Free Methodist Church leaders and members to strive for slaveryâs âre-abolition.â âIâm a missionary to a problem, not a place,â he says. âI just returned from Greece, Bulgaria, and Hungary. Before that I was in Michigan and 20 other states. Slavery is everywhere.â
Austinâs challenge to Free Methodists has inspired action from the Free Methodist church — and from Seattle Pacific.
As Lynnea Common, assistant director for the Office of Residence Life, browses her files full of details tracking campus events and student activist groups — an International Justice Mission club, The Abolition, UNITE, and now Set Free — she sees increasing zeal.
âI have witnessed a sense of studentsâ very real heartbreak over the realization that modern slavery exists,â she says. âWhile slavery may have taken different shapes and forms over the decades, the sentiment of our students responding is: âEnough is enough!â
âThe next very real question has been: âWhat can I do?â Whether it be a student engaging the topic of human trafficking in a research paper, or hosting an art display in Pioneer Square to donate the proceeds to the anti-trafficking movement, our students respond in genuinely meaningful ways.â
This year during Autumn Quarter, 20 freshmen attended USEM 1000, âHuman Trafficking and the Modern Abolitionist Movement.â Taught by Margaret Diddams, professor of industrial/organizational psychology, they examined causes, consequences, and solutions.
âI believe the mission of the University attracts students who care about important topics,â says Common, âbut it doesnât stop there. Our students bring creative and engaging responses, and spur one another on to engage both personally and in their fields of study.â
As a freshman at °”ÍűTV in 2013, Summer Downs sought opportunities to make a difference. Having worked in the Philippines with anti-trafficking organization International Justice Mission during her high school years, Downs was pleased to discover a club led by Chelsea Van Essen â14. Van Essen helped establish a partnership between the club and Seattleâs First Free Methodist Church, working with Bonnie Burgoyne Brann â72, who recently retired from her role as associate pastor. They renamed the club âSet Freeâ to reflect Free Methodismâs anti-slavery movement.
Mia Hays â91, an administrative assistant for the Family and Consumer Sciences department, serves as advisor to Set Free. âWe are trying to raise awareness, to be prayerful, to provide training, and to take action,â she says.
With an email list of about 400 students, Set Free holds weekly leadership meetings for planning and prayer, and monthly gatherings for club members. They host events with guest speakers (including state Senator Jeanne Kohl-Welles, a champion of anti-trafficking legislation) and screenings of informative documentaries; and provide support for local organizations, including and . They recently held a competition between °”ÍűTV residence halls to raise funds for care packages given to trafficking survivors. Some members ran in a 5K to benefit World Concernâs trafficking prevention programs. And collaborating with Seattle Against Slavery and REST, they collected information from online classifieds in order to reach out to women in the sex trade, some of whom then set up appointments with social workers.
During March 2014, Downs joined Brann, Hays, °”ÍűTV Nurse Practitioner Kristen Goetz Jones â01 â05, MSN â09, and other °”ÍűTV students on a trip to Athens, Greece, to work with Set Free Movement associate Kali Long and Christian organizations that support those seeking to escape sex slavery. They learned that women in a post-trafficking business program needed new ways to earn money. âWe brought in people from °”ÍűTVâs Family and Consumer Sciencesâ fashion design [program],â Downs says. âThe women had been making only purses and bags, and they wanted to step it up. These students put together new sewing patterns.â
The trip was a sobering experience for all of them. âWe saw off-duty police going into the brothels,â she says. âThat was hard to watch.â But it was also motivating. Downs, who is majoring in global development studies, succeeded Van Essen as Set Free president for the 2014–15 academic year, and she plans to continue in that role next year.
Whatâs more, Downs is working on a new front to serve those who are vulnerable to — and survivors of — trafficking.
âWeâre starting a clothing brand,â says Downs. She and some classmates are launching the Seattle flagship location of TK Threads, a new brand for fashion company Tight Knit LLC. TK Threads will employ and provide a living wage for survivors of human trafficking and others at risk of exploitation. Workers will own their own sewing machines and work in their homes. Their products will compete with those produced by major global companies, but TK Threads has an advantage: local entrepreneur Jessica Watson, founder of Tight Knit LLC, is a world-renowned designer already popular with REI, Target, Roxy Quicksilver, and Zumiez. âSheâs been to so many factories around the world,â says Downs, âand she knows what conditions are like there.â
Imagine this: You walk into a high-end department store. You see two red dresses side by side: One is a factory-made dress imported from a region known for human-rights violations, and the other was sewn by a free woman earning a living wage from TK Threads. âYouâll read her story and see her picture,â says Watson. âThe dresses will be the same quality, both with great designs. We believe people will choose to support these women.â
They have good reason for confidence. TK Threads won °”ÍűTV’s Social Venture Competitionâs $2,000 runner-up award and the $1,000 Don Summers Peopleâs Choice award.
And if consumers buy TK Threads clothing, theyâll play a small but crucial role in advancing the Set Free movement. While the Free Methodist founders would surely be dismayed to learn about the prevalence of slavery today, no doubt theyâd find these students and their passion for freedom inspiring.