In 1990 Hargreaves was ordained as a
Pentecostal minister under the auspices of the
International Ministerial Council of Great Britain and served as an associate pastor at Edmonton Temple church in North East London. He taught New Testament Greek at Edmonton Temple's 'Word of Life' bible college. He studied for a Diploma in Christian Ministry at the International Bible Institute of London, where he gained a Distinction. He then obtained a BA Honours degree in Theology from London University's King's College and a Post-graduate Diploma in Theology from Oxford University. He then went on to win the first Studentship Award for Oxford University's newly formed Centre for Christianity & Culture. The award funded his studies for a master's degree in
Anthropology. As part of the conditions of the Studentship Award he also gave a series of lectures at the Centre for Christianity & Culture on the subject of the Black Majority Churches in Britain. He was also a member of the Black Theology in Britain group with Professor
Robert Beckford and other black leading theologians. Hargreaves is an
Associate of King's College (AKC). In 1994 Hargreaves married Maxine Williams, the founder and pastor of Hephzibah Christian Centre in Hackney, and he joined his wife in Christian ministry as co-pastor of the church. Hargreaves, apart from pastoring the Hephzibah Christian Centre with his wife Maxine, was also deeply involved in community work in North East London and elsewhere. Whilst studying at Oxford University from 1995-1997 Hargreaves served as an Associate Chaplain at
Campsfield House Immigration Detention Centre. He served as
Hackney Council's strategic partnership representative for the Christian community in Hackney. He was also employed as faith community manager for
Waltham Forest Council and played a major role in maintaining good community relations with the Muslim community in the borough in the aftermath of the
7 July 2005 London bombings. In mid-1997, whilst working as a project worker for the charity Hackney Employment Link Project, Hargreaves made a successful bid to the European Union's European Social Fund for funding to launch the LEAP adult literacy programme in Hackney. As lead teacher for the programme he taught many adults how to read. In 1998, again with European funding, Hargreaves launched the Hephzibah Intro-net Project, setting up two of the earliest cybercafes in London, one at Edmonton Green and the other at the New Deal Campus in Hackney. The project introduced unemployed young people to the Internet, website design and Wireless Application Protocol, which Hargreaves himself taught. From 2001 to 2004 Hargreaves edited the CANDL Light newsletter for
Barnardo's Church and Neighbourhood Development in London Project. In 2004, Hargreaves and his wife, Maxine, founded the East London Christian Choir School in Hackney, an independent school which used the
Accelerated Christian Education programme. Hargreaves served as Chair of the
Metropolitan Police Service's 'STOP & SEARCH Community Consultative Committee' under Assistant Commissioner
Brian Paddick. The committee revised the
Stop and Search protocol for the Metropolitan Police only to see their work disregarded when the police were given new Stop & Search powers under section 44 of the
Terrorism Act 2000. Hargreaves also served on the Metropolitan Police 'Operation Blunt' anti-knife crime committee and attempted to initiate a knife and gun bin programme in Waltham Forest and Hackney. Hargreaves no longer pastors a church, instead he now travels the world as a missionary focusing on empowerment through the creative arts. He developed a stage play with Ugandan actors in Uganda for the 2017 Edinburgh Fringe Festival. He has also been responsible for promoting Christian films in the UK and across Africa, including
Black Nativity (2013),
''God's Not Dead (2014) and
Selma'' (2014). Hargreaves is a regular commentator on BBC1's
Sunday Morning Live show and appears from time to time on other news and current affairs programmes. ==Political career==