Andrea Saner Archives - 黑料正能量 News /now/news/tag/andrea-saner/ News from the 黑料正能量 community. Mon, 29 Jun 2020 15:13:48 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 黑料正能量’s free summer course 鈥業magining the Future after COVID-19鈥 open to all /now/news/2020/imagining-the-future-after-covid-19-community-members-invited-to-free-summer-interdisciplinary-course/ /now/news/2020/imagining-the-future-after-covid-19-community-members-invited-to-free-summer-interdisciplinary-course/#comments Wed, 17 Jun 2020 18:45:38 +0000 /now/news/?p=46283

What will a post-pandemic world look like? How is COVID-19 affecting each of us differently, and what are our responsibilities to one another in the face of those disparities? What do we know about the biology of the virus? And are there things that are changing for the better because of this crisis?

A free seven-week online course offered at 黑料正能量 this summer will delve into those questions and more. Community members are welcome. Students can opt for a pass/fail grade and will have online access to readings, videos, and other materials before each class. 

The course meets each Tuesday evening, beginning June 30, from 6:30-8:30 p.m. for seven weeks, with a different pair or trio of faculty and staff from different academic fields leading each class.

The lectures and Q and A will be recorded and available for viewing later.

The course is co-led by language and literature professor Kevin Seidel and chemistry professor Laurie Yoder.

鈥淲hat pulled me in at first was the possibility of teaching with faculty from all three schools 鈥 sciences, social sciences, and humanities 鈥 talking together and learning from one another about the virus,鈥 Seidel said. When the pandemic hit, he started fervently gathering information and perspective: from scientists, from fictive literature, and from poetry, trying to make sense of 鈥渢his strange new world.鈥 


Week 1 | June 30, Tuesday, 6:30鈥8:30 p.m.

Treating COVID-19

What do we know about the biology of COVID-19? What鈥檚 next in vaccine development? What public health measures are working to slow the spread of COVID-19?

Kristopher Schmidt, Associate Professor of Biology

Kate Clark, Assistant Professor of Nursing


Week 2 | July 7, Tuesday, 6:30鈥8:30 p.m.

Pandemic History and Data

What can we learn from past pandemics about life after this one? What can we learn from visual presentations of data about the pandemic? 

Mary Sprunger, Professor of History

Daniel Showalter, Associate Professor of Mathematics


Week 3 | July 14, Tuesday, 6:30鈥8:30 p.m.

Politics and Collective Trauma

Why has the U.S. response to COVID-19 been so contentious and uneven? What is collective trauma and what might it have to do with that response?

Mark Metzler Sawin, Professor of History

Ryan Thompson, Assistant Professor of Psychology

Trina Trotter Nussbaum, Associate Director, Center for Interfaith Engagement


Week 4 | July 21, Tuesday, 6:30鈥8:30 p.m.

Zoonotic Viruses, Wet Markets, and the Economics of COVID-19

Where do coronaviruses come from? What are the links between environmental degradation and pandemics? What does COVID-19 have to teach us about how our economy is connected to the natural world? What are the economic impacts from a pandemic?

Jim Yoder, Professor of Biology

Jim Leaman, Associate Professor of Business and Leadership


Week 5 | July 28, Tuesday, 6:30鈥8:30 p.m.

Our Life with Animals, Our Life with God

Why are so many people taking refuge in nature during the pandemic? Why is that refuge harder to come by for some people? What do the scriptures say about how our life with God is related to our life with animals? 

Steven Johnson, Professor of Visual and Communication Arts 

Andrea Saner, Associate Professor of Old Testament


Week 6 | August 4, Tuesday, 6:30鈥8:30 p.m.

Systemic Racism in the U.S. before and after COVID-19

Why has COVID-19 hit African-Americans harder than other groups? Why does rural Navajo Nation have the highest infection rates in the country?

Jenni Holsinger, Associate Professor of Sociology 

Matt Tibbles, Teaching Fellow, Applied Social Sciences

Jim Yoder, Professor of Biology


Week 7 | August 11, Tuesday, 6:30鈥8:30 p.m.

Resilience, Repair, and Transformation after COVID-19

How do we carry forward what we鈥檝e learned about COVID-19, trauma, and restorative justice? 

Johonna Turner, Assistant Professor of Restorative Justice and Peacebuilding

Katie Mansfield, Lead Trainer, Strategies for Trauma Awareness and Resilience (STAR)

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黑料正能量 offers free webinars for ministry, parents, educators, healthcare professionals, racial and social justice advocates /now/news/2020/in-anxious-times-emu-offers-free-webinars-for-ministry-parents-and-educators-healthcare-professionals/ Tue, 26 May 2020 14:44:06 +0000 /now/news/?p=46073 黑料正能量 offers several academic and professional programs related to trauma and resilience and restorative justice, and integrates this expertise into general coursework for programs not specifically focused on the topic.

For more information, visit graduate degree and certificate programs on trauma and resilience in the MA in Education program and this hub for upcoming professional development, training and courses at 黑料正能量’s Center for Justice and Peacebuilding.


Webinars on racial justice and social justice

The , a program of 黑料正能量鈥檚 Center for Justice and Peacebuilding, offers a webinar series each fall and spring semester. Past webinars are available on the website, including a听, and on criminal justice reform, racial justice and the intersection of these efforts.

Also visit听CJP听and听Eastern Mennonite Seminary听to view course offerings on racial and social justice.


Navigating Ministry During COVID-19

This series of six online forum discussions provides resources to pastors, but all are welcome to attend. Visit emu.edu/seminary/forum-series

  • June 10, 3 p.m. Ethical Issues of Medical Care, facilitated by Donald Tyson and Catherine Lee.
  • June 24, 3 p.m. Biblical Resources for Despair and Hope, facilitated by Nancy Heisey, Andrea Saner and Matthew Bucher.

Trauma and Resilience in Healthcare Settings

Visit emu.edu/lancaster/continuing-ed/

  • June 9, 12 p.m. Trauma-informed Strategies for Healthcare Providers: During and After COVID-19, presented by Janelle Bitikofer.

Trauma and Resilience for Parents & Educators

Elaine Zook Barge presents the following webinars. Visit emu.edu/lancaster/continuing-ed/

  • June 23, 12 p.m. Helping Parents Respond to the Impact, focusing on the impact of the waves (overwhelm) and wounds (trauma) on the body, brain and behavior and some tools to release trauma energy, re-integrate the brain and self-regulation.
  • August 11, 12 p.m. Helping Parents Prepare for Whatever is Ahead, This webinar will focus on resilience and the window of tolerance and resources for widening it.

Educators: see also the June 23-24 Restorative Justice in Education Conference, now online

  • June 23-24, 8:30 a.m. – 6 p.m.
  • $100 per participant
  • Theme: 鈥淵outh-Led Restorative Justice鈥
  • Input from experts in the field of restorative justice as it pertains to education. Sessions will be offered for newcomers to the field as well as those with experience in RJE. Keynote speaker is Dr. Anita Wadhwa, with Ram Bhagat, Martha Brown, Joe Brummer, Kathy Evans, Laura Feichtinger McGrath, Bob Garrity, Kevin Gilbert, April Howard, Emily Imgram, Deb Lokrantz, Judy Mullet, Dwanna Nicole, Sal Romero, and David Shenk.
  • For more information, visit emu.edu/maed/rje-conference
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Seminary’s School for Leadership Training 鈥楤roken Vessels, Thriving Pastor鈥 slated for January /now/news/2017/emu-school-leadership-training-broken-vessels-thriving-pastor-slated-january/ /now/news/2017/emu-school-leadership-training-broken-vessels-thriving-pastor-slated-january/#comments Thu, 30 Nov 2017 14:09:19 +0000 /now/news/?p=35921 The ministry model of clay jars can take several twists: Are ministers cracked pots? Crackpots? Broken vessels? Is their work 鈥 to use another Biblical metaphor 鈥 but the sowing of grains of wheat that fall into the earth and die?

Proclaiming God incarnate even in brokenness 鈥 within themselves, in their congregations and neighborhoods, and nationally 鈥 is no small task for pastors. Eastern Mennonite Seminary鈥檚 听(SLT) participants will explore themes of thriving and succeeding in ministry even in the context of so much reason to lose heart.

The Jan. 15-17 training 鈥淏roken Vessels, Thriving Pastor鈥 will feature Iris de Le贸n-Hartshorn, The Reverend Meredith McNabb, and an alumni panel. Seminars will feature a Charlottesville, Virginia, pastor who confronted the 鈥淯nite the Right鈥 rally in August, a personal leadership coach, and various EMS faculty.

鈥淣one of us is free from brokenness,鈥 said Les Horning, director of seminary admissions and SLT coordinator. 鈥淎nd not one of our congregations and communities is exempt, either. The question is, 鈥楬ow can we recognize and act in the extraordinary power of God wherever and whoever we are?鈥欌

In her keynote address 鈥淏ridges crossed, lessons learned: My journey in leadership,鈥 Hartshorn will use her own life story as an invitation to face brokenness 鈥渁s an integral aspect of finding one鈥檚 place as a leader.鈥 Hartshorn is the director of transformative peacemaking for Mennonite Church USA and a leader in racial and gender justice in the church.

A panel of alumni will present the second keynote address, 鈥淭hriving and brokenness on the front lines.鈥 It will feature reflections on the challenges and joys in ministry contexts ranging from rural western plains to urban streets. Panelists will include:

  • Brett Klingenberg, MDiv 2011, Pastor, First Mennonite Church, Beatrice, Nebraska
  • Carmen Horst, MDiv 2010, Associate Pastor, James Street Mennonite Church, Lancaster, Pennsylvania
  • Nicholas Detweiler-Stoddard, MDiv 2010, Pastor, Salem Mennonite Church, Freeman, South Dakota
  • Lorie Hershey, MDiv 2005, Pastor, West Philly Mennonite Church, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

In the final keynote, McNabb 鈥 an ordained elder in the Virginia United Methodist Conference, the director of the Center for Clergy Excellence, and former Washington D.C.-area pastor and attorney working primarily with low-income victims of domestic violence 鈥 will use as a guiding image the motif of kintsugi, a Japanese method for repairing broken ceramics with a special lacquer mixed with gold, silver, or platinum. The technique is based on the philosophy of recognizing an object鈥檚 history and, instead of disguising it, incorporating the repair into the new piece.

Other events will include a pastor appreciation breakfast with 黑料正能量 president Susan Schultz Huxman, facilitated conversation circles, a showing of Dr. 鈥檚 film 鈥淚 shall not hate: A journey of hope through faith, tolerance, and courage,鈥 and worship.

Seminars include:

  • 鈥淟ove Over Fear: Subverting evil in the way of Jesus鈥 with Brittany Caine-Conley, director of University Ministry at Westminster Presbyterian Church and co-founder of Congregate Charlottesville [read more about her work here];
  • 鈥淲hen the Center Cannot Hold: Leadership in an age of polarization鈥 with , associate professor in 黑料正能量鈥檚 ;
  • 鈥淣o Quick Fix for Brokenness in Self or in Others鈥 with Kenton Derstine, EMS faculty;
  • 鈥淕od鈥檚 Word and Ours: Praying the Psalms鈥 with , EMS faculty;
  • 鈥淭rain Stations, Bike Trails and Bus Routes鈥 with , a life and work transition advisor and personal leadership coach;
  • 鈥淧astoral Responses to Racism in Our Community and Congregation鈥 with , director of Transformative Peacemaking, Mennonite Church – USA;
  • 鈥淕leaning Resilience from the Good News, Both Then and Now鈥 with , EMS faculty;
  • 鈥淲hatever You Do, Just Don鈥檛 Talk about THAT!鈥 with , EMS associate dean; and
  • 鈥淧astoring in the Landscape: Geological and ecological lessons鈥 with , director of the Center for Clergy Excellence.

鈥淲e invite you to bring your stories of brokenness, and your stories of how you confronted brokenness,鈥 Horning said. 鈥淏ring your jars of clay and your dying grains of wheat. Together we thrive.鈥

For more information, visit , call 540-432-4698, or email slt@emu.edu.

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School for Leadership Training addresses pastoral responses to a racialized and divided America /now/news/2017/school-leadership-training-addresses-pastoral-responses-racialized-divided-america/ Fri, 20 Jan 2017 18:06:55 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=31501 鈥淪ome of us are more knowledgeable about what is happening with people 6,000 miles away, people we鈥檝e never met, than what is

Professor David Evans, director of cross-cultural missions at Eastern Mennonite Seminary, leads a seminar titled “Rebirth of a White Nation,” offered twice during SLT.

happening with our neighbors,鈥 said Professor during 鈥檚 School for Leadership Training. 鈥淚n the 21st century, we don鈥檛 need to travel 6,000 miles to meet others, ethnic others, racial others. We just need to open our doors or walk down the hall. We could do better to love our literal neighbors, those people closest to us.鈥

Evans鈥 point, made during a panel presentation on the themes of 鈥渘eighboring鈥 and 鈥渙thering,鈥 drew nods from listeners in Martin Chapel 鈥 all of whom had come to the two-day workshop to deepen knowledge and explore engagement with the diversities of politics, culture and theology in today鈥檚 modern church and culture.

Approximately 240 pastors and lay leaders from 16 states attended. At least eight denominations were represented: Brethren in Christ, Church of the Brethren, Church of Christ, Disciples of Christ, Mennonite Church USA, United Methodist, Lutheran and Unitarian Universalist. The event included four keynote addresses, workshops and a seminary faculty panel addressing the theme of 鈥淵earning to Get Along 鈥 And Stay True to Ourselves.鈥

‘It is not enough to stay silent’

Participants ranged from veteran pastors to seminary students to laypeople such as Janelle Clark, of Newport News, Virginia, who is contemplating seminary studies. Pastor Sandy Drescher-Lehman has attended for the past seven years, anticipating by January, the need for collegial connection, spiritual sustenance and reflection “on where I was when I came last year spiritually, emotionally and vocationally听 and comparing that to my current place in the world.”

鈥淎s a white person living and working in a multicultural neighborhood,鈥 Cynthia Lapp, pastor at Hyattsville Mennonite Church in Hyattsville, came to learn 鈥渕ore about racism and the ways white privilege functions … It is not enough to stay silent. Racism will not just fade away; we must act and speak.鈥

鈥淚 came to help uncover and discover what is often hidden in our racialized society and to consider how these forces of racialization are forming and shaping us as a church,鈥 said John Stolzfus, Franconia Conference youth minister and campus pastor for Dock Mennonite Academy.

Drew G.I. Hart, professor at Messiah College, listens to Pastor Jeff Carr of Bridgewater Church of the Brethen, Bridgewater, Virginia, discuss a point related to Hart’s keynote address at the School for Leadership Training.

Reflecting after the event, Stolzfus questions: 鈥淗ow can we as leaders empty ourselves of our privilege and power in the self-emptying way of Christ in order to embody the incarnational love of God? To the extent in which we are not able to see or understand the suffering and struggle of the immigrant, racial minority, foreigner, sexual minority, or anyone who may be different from us reveals the poverty of our relationships. We need to be in proximity to and stand next to those who are “other” in order to truly be a neighbor.

With opportunities for worship, reflection and prayer in the midst of education, many came away with more questions than answers.

Mick Sommers, lead pastor at Ridgeview Mennonite Church in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, was 鈥渟obered by the realization that generations of attitudes and structure within the church will likely not be altered in a short span of time 鈥 I recognize within myself the need for a constant awareness and intentional mindfulness to counteract what has been my own socialization about race and power.鈥

Inequality and the 鈥榳hitened Jesus鈥

, of Duke University Divinity School, and , of Messiah College, offered three extensive keynotes on the subjects of a practical theology of inequality, power and unity and the whitened Jesus, respectively.

Cleveland, a social psychologist, talked about the socialization of racism, the current politics of victimhood and related both concepts to Jesus鈥檚 statements and actions as a marginalized and oppressed person.

鈥淚f you looked to see where Jesus was socially located in every single one of his actions, how he emptied himself of his influence, platform and power 鈥 you鈥檒l probably be astounded,鈥 she said. 鈥淛esus was always using his voice to make a point about what our relationships should be.鈥

Hart drew from history and culture to highlight the ubiquity of the 鈥渨hite European Jesus fixed in our places of worship,鈥 an image that 鈥渂olsters a social system organized around racial hierarchy. 鈥

Les Horning, associate director of seminary development, offers communion during the closing worship service.

While lifting up the constructed image of the blonde, Nordic and explicitly non-Jewish Jesus, Hart asked, 鈥淲here do we go with that image 鈥 to recover our Gentile identity? None of us have a copyright on Christianity or Jesus 鈥 Let us remember that it is someone else鈥檚 story that shapes our lives.鈥

Selected seminars summarized

A complete list of seminars is available .

Understanding the 鈥榦ther鈥 through the mirror/window of popular culture with Benjamin Bixler, PhD student, Drew University.

Bixler began with a clip of Kendrick Lamar鈥檚 Grammy Awards performance of 鈥淭he Blacker The Berry,鈥 in which the rapper and dancers, dressed as convicts, perform in the setting of a jail. Bixler discussed popular culture (movies, novels, music, etc.) as a way of engagement with 鈥渢he other鈥 on several levels: not only does the alternate world and characters offer alternate perspectives and provoke empathy, but the people who are discussing, analyzing or critiquing the work are also learning about themselves and each other.

Rebirth of a White Nation, with Dr. David Evans, EMS professor.

Evans facilitated discussions about white racial identity, a brief history of race in the United States, and the characteristics or qualities of 鈥済ood white people鈥 before asking the question 鈥淗ow might following Jesus be consistent or inconsistent with pursuing white status?鈥

“Race is national discipleship that teaches us the values we must have in order to belong to a certain status or group,鈥 Evans says. 鈥淭hese values rival what Jesus calls us to be or to become … If we鈥檝e been discipled into white nationalism, and no one was born white, then we’ve been converted into something that we need to be converted out of.鈥

How Do You Measure Life Change? The Role of Data and Measurements in Community Engagement with Wes Furlong, director of church development, EVANA network.

  • Churches often take an input-focused approach to thinking about social/service work (e.g. pounds of food gather for food drive) rather than thinking carefully about outputs and desired impact.
  • Serving communities, at its best, begins with careful work to fully understand context, strengths and assets and to ensure that all actors are involved.
  • Those involved in social/service work need to avoid the temptation of taking a short-term or transaction view to their efforts and instead strive to take a systems view with a focus on the long-term.

    Dr. Andrea Saner speaks at the seminary faculty panel. She is joined by colleagues (from left) Kevin Clark, David Evans, Lonnie Yoder, Dorothy Jean Weaver and Emily Peck McClain. Not shown is Kenton Derstine.

Seeking the Peace of the City, with Dr. Johonna Turner, 黑料正能量 professor, and Julian Turner, graduate student.

The Turners, both raised in the Washington D.C. area, also lived and worked there until moving to Harrisonburg. Johonna Turner was a public school teacher involved in peacebuilding and empowerment work with youth, while Julian Turner worked in social services, specifically with HIV-AIDS patients. The Turners led discussions, framed by Jeremiah 29.7, about perceptions of the choices inner-city citizens make and the visualization of a more peaceful and harmonious city. This was conjoined to a scriptural exploration of compassion as modeled by Jesus, leading to a model for action in connection, lamentation and amplification. Presenters emphasized that care and consideration for voices of all citizens, whether urban dweller or rural folk, because 鈥渨e are all connected.鈥

Panel: Navigating the move from 鈥榦ther鈥 to 鈥榥eighbor鈥 in the context of theological education.

A panel of seminary faculty 鈥 including Dr. Kevin Clark, Dr. David Evans, Dr. Lonnie Yoder, Dr. Andrea Saner, Dr. Emily Peck McClain, Dr. Kenton Derstine and Dr. Dorothy Jean Weaver 鈥 discussed the role of theological education and cross-cultural engagement in shaping the move from 鈥榦ther鈥 to 鈥榥eighbor鈥 in students and communities; how society defines each of these terms; and issues of power and privilege in the seminary classroom.

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