Trainer uses horses to teach biblical lessons
by Sherry Kughn
skughn@annistonstar.com
Jun 16, 2012 | 2040 views |  0 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Chance Hill of Satsuma is coming to Calhoun County to demonstrate biblical lessons by training a wild horse.

He and his father, Roy, a minister at First Baptist Church of Satsuma, will use microphones to talk to the crowd as Chance convinces a wild horse to let him to ride it. The way a gentle trainer tames a stubborn horse, they teach in their message, is the way God “tames” a stubborn human.

Chance Hill, 21, started the ministry he calls SPURS, which stands for “submit, peace, understand, respect and serve” — steps horses must learn in order to be useful to their owners.

The demonstration will be hosted by New Haven Baptist Church of Anniston. The church is planning a festival around the demonstration, from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. June 23. Hill will demonstrate his horse-training skills around 1 p.m. The demonstration will last between 30 to 45 minutes.

James Baird, brotherhood director at the church, said he and other members heard of Hill’s ministry and traveled to a town in Tuscaloosa County to see a demonstration.

“It’s inspiring and impressive,” Baird said. “It applies to all ages, not just only to a youth group.”

Hill, a business-management student at the University of Mobile, said his family also raises quarter horses and bees, in addition to serving a church.

Hill said he is about 18 months out from being roughed up by a horse, although not during a demonstration. He was riding one on a flat-top road when the horse reared up, flipped backward and landed on top of him. He suffered a cracked tailbone.

The horse ministry was inspired by another trainer, Paul Daily of Louisiana.

Hill does not call himself a “horse whisperer,” a name made famous by the 1995 book and the 1998 movie starring Robert Redford. Both were based on a famous Irish horse trainer named Daniel Sullivan, who observers said seemed to whisper to horses.

Hill prefers to be called a horse trainer with a gentle touch — as opposed to forcing a horse to submit.

“It makes a better horse than if you do it the rough, tough way,” Hill said.

Contact Sherry Kughn at 256-235-3548.

Horse-training and festival

When:
Festival from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. June 23. Chance Hill’s horse-training demonstration at 1 p.m.

Where: New Haven Baptist Church, 100 New Haven Road, Anniston, 256-237-2604.

Cost: Free, but a love offering will be accepted.
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