Jabe Largen is the Senior Pastor of Pinehurst United Methodist Church in Pinehurst, NC, where he has served since 2021. He is ordained in the United Methodist tradition as an Elder and a native of Pulaski, VA, Jabe, holds an M.Div. from Duke University's Divinity School and a D.Min from the Candler School of Theology at Emory University. He is the author of the memoir They Call Me Jabe published by Resource Publications an imprint of Wipf and Stock.
""Backstories--we all have them. Jabe's is unsparingly hard. Yet God flips the script to Jabe's recurring thought, 'This should be me, ' demonstrating again the power of the scriptural question, 'Is anything too hard for the Lord?'"" --Hope Morgan Ward, Bishop in Residence, Candler School of Theology, Emory University ""They Call Me Jabe is a genuine page-turner. If the reader is not familiar with what drugs, especially, the opioids, have wrought in places like Pulaski County, Virginia, Jabe Largen's memoir will be a revelation. He has given an unsparing account of the many devastations visited on him, his family, and friends due to drug addiction. Largen, who now pastors a Methodist church in North Carolina, also offers an unsentimental account of his redemption. This book is a none-too-gentle reminder that with the Lord and a few of his helpers, the Light really can overcome the darkness. This is a conversion story--and much, much more."" --Richard Lischer, author of Stations of the Heart: Parting with a Son ""They Call Me Jabe felt like stumbling upon someone's private diary. Raw. Honest. Tender. The palpable reality of addiction, disappointment, opioids, and loss was excruciating . . . yet not the last word. Grace gets the last word."" --Connie Mitchell Shelton, Bishop, Raleigh Episcopal Area