According to official and legislative tributes, Brazier felt called to ministry in the late 1940s and began formal ministerial preparation in the 1950s while still working for the postal service. He became pastor of the Universal Church of Christ in 1952. In 1960, following leadership changes at the Apostolic Church of God, Brazier was asked to become its pastor; his congregation merged with ACOG, and he began a decades-long pastorate in Woodlawn.
Pastor of the Apostolic Church of God (1960–2008) Brazier served as pastor of the Apostolic Church of God from 1960 until retiring in 2008. ACOG’s institutional history and legislative tributes credit his tenure with rapid growth and multiple building expansions, including: • construction of a new sanctuary at 63rd Street and Kenwood Avenue (opened 1977); • later expansion to a larger campus at 63rd Street and Dorchester Avenue with a 3,000-seat sanctuary and television facilities (completed 1992); • subsequent additions such as a banquet-hall wing (1998) and a youth and family center (opened 2007). State and city tributes described the membership growth during his leadership as increasing from roughly 100 members at the time of the 1960 merger to more than 20,000 by the 2000s. Brazier handed leadership of the church to his son, Dr. Byron T. Brazier, who succeeded him in 2008.
Episcopal leadership Brazier served as a diocesan bishop in the
Pentecostal Assemblies of the World (PAW). A 2008 Illinois House resolution stated that he served as diocesan of the 6th Episcopal District (Illinois), overseeing more than 80 churches, for 30 years. A 1994
Congressional Record proclamation also referenced his election as a bishop in 1976 and identified him as an episcopal leader in the PAW. == Community organizing and civil rights ==