Brenda Martin Hurst Archives - 黑料正能量 News /now/news/tag/brenda-martin-hurst/ News from the 黑料正能量 community. Wed, 23 Jan 2019 15:17:07 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Among 鈥榮tormy seas of change,鈥 School for Leadership Training celebrates 50 years of supporting ministry /now/news/2019/among-stormy-seas-of-change-school-for-leadership-training-celebrates-50-years-of-supporting-ministry/ Wed, 23 Jan 2019 14:41:56 +0000 /now/news/?p=41076 Approximately 200 pastors, ministers and laity attended the 50th annual School for Leadership Training Jan. 14-16 at Eastern Mennonite Seminary. Funded by the seminary鈥檚 Lilly Foundation 鈥淭hriving in Ministry鈥 grant, the three-day event included workshops, seminars, worship and fellowship opportunities focused on serving in challenging times of 鈥減olitical upheaval and national divisions鈥 in the country and 鈥渢heological debates in our denominations, congregations and families,鈥 said Brenda Martin Hurst, Lilly Grant director.

Participants came from 13 states and two countries, and represented nine denominations, including Mennonite, Quaker, Church of the Brethren, Disciples of Christ, Church of God of Christ, Methodist, Baptist, Presbyterian and United Church of Christ.

Hurst and the planning committee selected Mark 4:35-41 as the guiding scripture.

鈥淣avigating these times as followers of Jesus and church leaders does feel like charting unknown waters in a choppy and stormy sea,鈥 Hurst said in her welcome. 鈥淭he biblical story found in Mark 4 of the disciples crossing the story sea with Jesus seemed appropriate for our repeated hearing and reflection over these days.鈥

Maren Tyedmers Hange, co-pastor of Charlottesville Mennonite Church, painted a special piece of art, featuring an empty boat floating in storm-swept seas, for contemplation. The boat is 鈥渋ntentionally empty as a invitation to join Jesus there,鈥 said Veva Mumaw, seminary admissions director and member of the planning committee.

John Pavlovitz, a keynote speaker during 2019 SLT, addresses attendees in Martin Chapel. (Photo by Andrew Strack)

Expanded worship opportunities throughout the three days led the gathered through interpretation and reflection on the scripture passage. Keynote addresses were provided by David Evans, associate professor of history and intercultural studies and the director of cross cultural programs at Eastern Mennonite Seminary; Sue Park-Hur, denominational minister for leadership development and transformative peacemaking for Mennonite Church USA; and John Pavlovitz, author and Methodist pastor.

Pavlovitz provided three keynotes, addressing parts of the scripture each day. A pastor for two decades, writer and activist from Wake Forest, North Carolina, Pavlovitz blogs about. His books include A Bigger Table: Building Messy, Authentic, and Hopeful Spiritual Community (Westminster John Knox Press, 2017) and HOPE and Other Superpowers: A Life-Affirming, Love-Defending, Butt-Kicking, World-Saving Manifesto (Simon & Schuster, 2018).

In an 鈥渦psidedown world鈥 that corrodes hope and faith, followers of Christ 鈥 seeking to embody the compassion modeled by Jesus, 鈥渢o intercede on the behalf of people in need鈥 鈥 often feel anger and disillusionment.

鈥淵ou have the eyes of Jesus and the heart of Jesus that moves you towards people who no one else knows, who everyone else avoids, who no one else hears,鈥 Pavlovitz said. The 鈥渃ollateral damage鈥 of moving with empathy towards those has to be acknowledged, but at the same time, the movement is the heart of the Gospel.

鈥淢uslim bans, health care repeals, ICE raids, Nazis in the street, debating the value of a black life,鈥 he said, 鈥淚 feel completely inverted spiritually. I feel profoundly disoriented as a Christian鈥ut disorientation means your faculties are intact, your mind is right, your heart is working properly, and your soul is keeping you human in profoundly inhuman times.鈥

Victor Gomez, superintendent of the Harrisonburg District of the United Methodist Church, presents a workshop during SLT. (Photo by Andrew Strack)

Pavlovitz suggested that the challenge for ministers and people of faith is 鈥渉ow to take that natural anger and channel it in to something redemptive and constructive 鈥 Can we find a transcendent Jesus? 鈥 Can we create a community where the full Jesus can be on display? I think we can. We have to embrace the activist, compassionate heart of Jesus with people who we would not otherwise be with, in places we would not think to be.”

Acknowledgements

In addition to Brenda Martin Hurst and Veva Mumaw, the planning committee included Dale Detweiler, pastor, Birch Grove Mennonite Church, Port Allegany, Pennsylvania; Peggy Packard, pastor of Weyers Cave United Methodist Church, Weyers Cave, Virginia; Dawn Ranck-Hower, pastor of New Holland Mennonite Church, of New Holland, Pennsylvania; and Danilo Sanchez, co-pastor, Ripple-Allentown, and associate pastor, Whitehall Mennonite Church, Allentown, Pennsylvania.

The worship planning team included Perry Blosser, Maren Tyedmers Hange, Matthew Hunsberger, Robert Michalides, Veva Mumaw and Ryan Scarberry.

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50th annual School for Leadership Training themed 鈥楾hriving in the Stormy Seas of Change鈥 /now/news/2018/50th-annual-school-for-leadership-training-themed-thriving-in-the-stormy-seas-of-change/ Mon, 26 Nov 2018 22:19:27 +0000 /now/news/?p=40552 The theme for the 50th annual School for Leadership Training (SLT) at Eastern Mennonite Seminary (EMS) 鈥 鈥淭hriving in the Stormy Seas of Change鈥 鈥 reflects both SLT鈥檚 ongoing relevance and its half-century legacy of inviting church leaders to join in worship and renewal.

The Jan. 14-16, 2019, event will highlight the Mark 4:35-41 narrative of Jesus鈥 crossing the stormy sea with his disciples, and feature keynote speakers John Pavlovitz, Sue Park-Hur and David Evans, plus seminars, facilitated conversation circles and luncheon discussions.

In addition, participants are invited to join in worship and sharing, a church leaders/pastor appreciation breakfast with President Susan Schultz Huxman, and a story slam competition in which participants can volunteer to tell humorous stories from their ministry experiences.

The deadline for early registration is Friday, Nov. 30.

鈥淐hurch leaders and pastors are keenly aware of the needs in their congregations,鈥 said SLT coordinator Veva Mumaw. 鈥淟ike other years, this will be a chance for them to find strength to thrive, to be inspired along with other ministers, and to become renewed in their calling to serve.鈥

This year, financial assistance is available through the Thriving in Ministry Lilly grant for pastors whose continuing education funding is insufficient or who as bi-vocational pastors face financial constraints.

鈥淭he seminary鈥檚 50-year commitment to offering School for Leadership Training reflects its steadfast commitment not only to training women and men for ministry but also to supporting and nurturing pastors in the years following their seminary training,鈥 said EMS Thriving in Ministry grant director Brenda Martin Hurst, who led the SLT planning committee from 2002-07 and is on the committee again this year. 鈥淔or the next five years, this grant will support EMS in offering SLT, focusing on helping pastors to thrive and to navigate the transitions they experience in ministry.鈥

Keynote speakers

Pavlovitz will present three keynote addresses. A pastor for two decades, writer and activist from Wake Forest, North Carolina, Pavlovitz blogs about and has published A Bigger Table: Building Messy, Authentic, and Hopeful Spiritual Community (Westminster John Knox Press, 2017) and HOPE and Other Superpowers: A Life-Affirming, Love-Defending, Butt-Kicking, World-Saving Manifesto (Simon & Schuster, 2018).

Park-Hur will provide the first keynote address. The denominational minister for leadership development and transformative peacemaking for Mennonite Church USA, Park-Hur is co-director of the Los Angeles peace center specializing in conflict transformation and restorative justice for immigrant churches. She served as co-lead pastor of Mt. View Mennonite Church in Upland, California, and co-church planter of Church for Others in Temple City. In addition, she taught theological English to pastors from overseas at Fuller Theological Seminary. She is trained in Intercultural Development Inventory and sexual abuse investigations, and is a Strategies for Trauma Awareness and Resilience practitioner.

Evans will present the fourth keynote address. An associate professor of history and intercultural studies and the director of cross-cultural programs at EMS, Evans focuses his teaching and research on the braided identity categories of race, religion, and nation. He is the co-editor of Between the World of Ta-Nehisi Coates and Christianity (Cascade, 2018), and practices a local 鈥渆co-lutionary鈥 lifestyle that promotes an ecologically just future for the diverse people of the Shenandoah Valley watershed. He is a United Methodist.

Themes reflect change

Past themes reflect SLT鈥檚 developing and persistent engagement with issues facing church leadership, from 1971鈥檚 theme of 鈥淭he Church in the 70鈥檚鈥 to 1982鈥檚 鈥淐reating a Resourceful Ministry鈥 to 1993鈥檚 鈥淲hich Way Worship?鈥

鈥淥ver the years the themes became more relevant and interesting as opposed to purely academic lectures,鈥 said Linda Alley, an ordained minister and spiritual director who from 2006-16 was involved with SLT as an assistant or director and in previous years participated with her pastor husband and as a seminary student.

Increasing diversity among the attendees led also to a widening array of workshops that met various needs in church leaders: for networking within and across denominational boundaries, for meaningful continuing education, for a chance to experience worship not as leaders but as participants, Alley said.

Its name鈥檚 evolution suggests a broadening understanding of leadership in congregations: The event first took place in 1970, with the name 鈥淢inisters Week.鈥 In 1983 the name expanded to 鈥淢inister Week: School for Leadership Training.鈥 By the mid-90s it had transitioned to just 鈥淪chool for Leadership Training.鈥

鈥淚t truly was a refreshment to the soul for many busy leaders who needed time for self-care and renewal,鈥 Alley said. She continues to follow the works of two past SLT lecturers in particular, Tilda Norburg () and Ruth Haley Barton (the ).

Learning and sharing in 2019

This year鈥檚 SLT includes a variety of seminars, facilitated conversation circles and luncheon discussions.

Seminars will include:

  • 鈥淏uilding resilience and practicing self-care as pastors鈥 with Park-Hur;
  • 鈥淓mbracing the Beauty of Failure鈥 with Pavlovitz;
  • 鈥淪uch time as this?鈥 with Victor Gomez, Virginia United Methodist Church Harrisonburg district superintendent;
  • 鈥淕ather up the Fragments: An Ecclesioculture for Thriving Small Churches鈥 with Bradley Roth, pastor of West Zion Mennonite Church, Moundridge, Kansas;
  • 鈥溾楾he Thundering Silence鈥: Hearing and Ministering to Combat Veterans suffering from PTSD and Moral Injury鈥 with Darin Bus茅, pastor of Riverside United Methodist Church, Fulks Run, Virginia.
  • 鈥淚t鈥檚 always been about bodies鈥 with EMS instructor Mary Thiessen Nation and Harrigan McMahan Bowman, an elder at Early Church in Harrisonburg; and
  • 鈥淩eading the Clouds鈥 with Maren Tyedmers-Hange, co-pastor at Charlottesville (Virginia) Mennonite Church.

Facilitated conversation circles will include:

  • 鈥淭he Loneliness of Leadership鈥 led by Sue Cockley, 黑料正能量 dean of graduate and seminary;
  • 鈥淧astoring in Polarizing Times鈥 led by Todd Friesen, pastor of East Chestnut Street Mennonite Church, Lancaster, Pennsylvania;
  • 鈥淗elp, I鈥檓 a solo pastor! Things I didn鈥檛 know I would have to do鈥 led by EMS Professor Lonnie Yoder; and
  • 鈥淏ats in the belfry鈥 led by Jeff Mumaw, a former mental health worker.

Luncheon discussion options will be 鈥淢inistry in Anabaptist Churches鈥 for students, leaders and conference ministers to network, and a 鈥淲omen in Ministry Gathering鈥 led by Hurst.

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Conference Encourages ‘Sexual Wholeness’ /now/news/2008/conference-encourages-sexual-wholeness/ Mon, 28 Jan 2008 05:00:00 +0000 http://www.emu.edu/blog/news/?p=1594 It was a risky subject, but planners and participants alike agreed that the 2008 School for Leadership Training at Eastern Mennonite Seminary was among the best ever.

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SLT to Focus on Sexual Wholeness /now/news/2007/slt-to-focus-on-sexual-wholeness/ Thu, 26 Jul 2007 04:00:00 +0000 http://www.emu.edu/blog/news/?p=1464

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Leadership School to Have ‘Wholeness’ Focus /now/news/2005/leadership-school-to-have-wholeness-focus/ Fri, 26 Aug 2005 04:00:00 +0000 http://www.emu.edu/blog/news/?p=928 Duane BeckDuane Beck

"Come, all you who are burdened and heavy-laden, and I will give you rest."

For busy and often harried church leaders, that scriptural promise should put music in their ears and a spring in their step, but reality may prove something else for many.

The concept of "Embodying God’s Wholeness in a Frenzied World" also happens to be the primary theme of the 2006 School for Leadership Training, Jan. 16-19 at .

This year’s is designed to help pastors and church leaders pay attention to their own well being," said , assistant professor of practical theology at EMS and SLT coordinator. "Pastors will have opportunities to slow down and to pray with and for each other. Meaningful worship times will again be a highlight," she added.

Primary resource speaker, Duane Beck, will draw from his own experience of wrestling with and seeking to embody wholeness in the midst of his ministerial calling. He has been lead pastor of Belmont Mennonite Church, Elkhart, Ind., since 1984 and previously served a church in Ohio for 13 years.

Belmont is a mission-oriented congregation that is made up of two culturally diverse worshiping groups and is actively involved in responding to its neighborhood and to the city of Elkhart.

Participants will be able to select four of 16 special interest classes being offered on such topics as "Praying the Scriptures," "Finding a Wholeness Balance in Ministry and Family/Relationships," "Jesus at the Movies" and "Lay of the Land: Mennonite Women in Ministry."

A new feature this year is recreation night on Tuesday evening, Jan. 17. A variety of activities are planned to relax, rejuvenate and invigorate church leaders – everything from line-dancing to volleyball to a Rook card tournament. Persons are encouraged to check the SLT web site for updates at .

Each day’s events will open with worship and music. Other activities include a forum with seminary dean Ervin R. Stutzman, a pastors and church leaders forum and a special dinner and program sponsored by the alumni and church relations offices. The conference will conclude the morning of Jan. 19 with worship and communion.

A "Pre-SLT" workshop is being offered 1:45-5 p.m. Jan. 16 on "Health and Wholeness in a Frenzied World" led by Ingrid Friesen Moser, stewardship of health manager at Mennonite Mutual Aid, Goshen, Ind.

Persons may register on-line at . The registration deadline is Dec. 31, 2005. After that date, $15 of the registration fee is non-refundable.

All registered participants are asked to check in from 12:30-1:45 p.m. or 3:45-5 p.m. on Jan. 16 in the gathering area on second floor of the seminary building.

For more SLT information, call Cindy Smoker at (540) 432-4597 or e-mail: churchrelations@emu.edu.

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Seminary Conference to Highlight ‘Transformed Congregations’ /now/news/2004/seminary-conference-to-highlight-transformed-congregations/ Wed, 24 Nov 2004 05:00:00 +0000 http://www.emu.edu/blog/news/?p=766 School for Leadership Training“Dwelling in God

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