Showing posts with label EfM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EfM. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 26, 2018

EFM: Education for Ministry

John Shelby Spong, the controversial, well traveled, and now retired, Episcopal Bishop from New Jersey, once claimed his early spiritual search was simply a means to seeking security for his anxious and insecure soul. He would discover he was only partially correct, as he later wrote in his autobiography,
"...I discovered not security, but the expansion of life, and the radical challenges that life brings when one is open to the depths of God who is for me the very Ground of All Being." 
 Those life challenges, experienced by all of us, can be better met and more fully lived with the help of EFM. The classes proved to be a wonderful tool, designed and oriented to help one discern and carry out his or her own ministry.


EFM, grounded in scripture but equally reliant on and open to critical thinking, historical scholarship, and modern theological studies, allows a student to re-experience and re-visit what the Hebrew and New Testament canons have not only 'said' to the Church and her followers, but more importantly, how those words have also been heard, received, shaped, and understood - in all their variety, for better and for worse. 

 Those same words, for both the experienced student and the interested newcomer (as both are present and equally welcome in EFM), can become ideas and thoughts that are so much better analyzed and understood with the help and collective insights of this committed group and its well-trained mentors. EFM provides the necessary space for a community that longs to understand the Christian story and its impact on human lives over an extended timeframe and in distant places - to include the perspective of the Other: the Muslim, the Buddhist, or Hindu, some converted in "both directions," along with the non-believer, who all remain, in and with their differences, our neighbors.

EFM allows us to see Christianity, as one of the course authors describes, as more than "an argument, an explanation, or a solution." But indeed, our faith can lead us to all of these facets, and to so much more. One is also led to see that Christians alone have no monopoly on God. And in learning to think theologically, students are encouraged to examine their beliefs and their relationship to our culture and the tradition of our Christian faith, making us more effective ministers in and to the world, in societies and communities increasingly described as post-Christian - yet still yearning for justice and a need to turn away from the harshness, coarseness, and incivility that many of us experience in daily and working life every day.

In practical and personal terms, EFM also helped me through a greatly changing course of life events, some involving unbounded happiness and gratitude for friends, work, and family; and others that brought a dark despair, with the unexpected illness and subsequent death of my wife of 32 years, and the mother of our two adult children. My EFM classmates supported me through aspects of life that sometimes seemed so drama-filled and emotion laden, and so lacking in any sense of control on my part, a control that I had previously come to rely upon, and assumed would always be there. But as a friend once told me: "that's not drama, that's life." EFM can help us with a new way of seeing life, in both its daily and dramatic forms. After all, doesn't the Book of Common Prayer tell us that God is equally present in both?

The increasing and enjoyable familiarity that an EFM class provides to its students never felt forced, and was always nurturing and comforting to me. EFM provided a welcome respite to a sometimes hectic and troubled world. This proved especially true in the cyclical and repeated context of having all four years' of the students and their specific yearly focus together in the same setting each week, hearing in one evening's session what you had thought you read and understood the year, or two, or three, before, but now with a new outlook and an enhanced appreciation that only another's voice might provide. This method ensures that there are both welcome changes of perspective, along with an equally important constancy of purpose in the weekly sessions.

 EFM is a wonderful tool, designed and oriented to help you discern and carry out your own ministry. Revisiting Bishop Spong, I would like to think that the course helps both the anxious AND the secure, as we all hopefully find an expansion of life that accompanies true fellowship, a diversity of thought, and an emphasis on the dignity of every human being.

Jeff Pack, Year 4




Tuesday, June 28, 2016

Education for Ministry: Fertile ground to grow your faith

“Will you continue in the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, in the breaking of bread, and in the prayers” (Baptismal Covenant, BCP 304).


Every baptized Christian is called to ministry. What is yours? Education for Ministry (EfM) is a program of the School of Theology at the University of the South (Sewanee) that provides the foundational education to assist you in discerning and carrying out your ministry. Like the mustard seed (Luke 13:18-19), we need fertile soil to grow. EfM is that fertile soil and we are the mustard seeds. Learning scriptures, church history, and theology is the light shining on the soil, warming it so the seed will sprout.

The EfM program develops an informed and knowledgeable laity through a series of four, one-year seminars. A small group seminar (maximum of 12 participants and two mentors) is the nucleus of the EfM program. Likened to the original house churches of the first century, our group conducts all four years concurrently in the same seminar. Year one students study the Hebrew Bible; year two the New Testament; year three is church history; year four wraps it all together with theology. Additionally, there are several interlude periods when all four years will study from the same material which is linked to that year’s theme. Themes from past years include: Living Faithfully in Your World (2013-14), Living Faithfully in a Multicultural World (2014-15), and Living as Spiritually Mature Christians (2015-16). The theme for next year will be Living Our Journey Into God. From mid-September through mid-June, we meet at on Tuesday evenings for fellowship over a meal, to discuss our studies, and to reflect theologically. Participants will spend on average between two to four hours weekly preparing for the seminars.

Seminar groups work under the leadership of mentors who serve as enablers and administrators. Mentors are not teachers who impart information to a class in the traditional sense. Instead they manage the group dynamics, guide the discussion of lessons and theological reflections, and administer logistics with Sewanee. Rather, the role of the teacher is engineered into the program materials as well as being heavily shaped by your fellow participants. Bringing the light of what we learn to share in an intimate group setting each week allows for insights and growth — new affirmations and understandings — that can sustain and support us in our lives as Christians living day-to-day in the world while simultaneously teaching us to listen to the Holy Spirit’s guidance for our personal ministries.

EfM is not a program for ordination, but rather a series of lay education seminars conducted amongst a small, tight knit community. Neither is EfM a Bible study. While the readings during the first two years are centered on the Bible, more important is the development of skills in theological reflection. In learning to think theologically, we examine our beliefs and their relationship to our culture and the tradition of our Christian faith, making us more effective ministers in the world.

Finally, EfM is not for everybody. While it may be easier to think of EfM as four one-year units rather than a full four-year program…it is still a commitment. It is important that potential participants seriously consider whether they will have the time to devote to the program. As previously noted, students need to be able to commit to regular attendance and active participation, which will include several hours weekly of preparation. The group relies on each member for it to achieve its full potential. Absences diminish that potential. Participants must also commit to developing and maintaining a healthy group dynamic that values a diversity of opinions while respecting the dignity of every human being.

For the interested or just curious, talk to one of the experienced EfM folks (Brother Albert Francis, Fred Smith, Lisa Churchill, Gordon Shugars, and Agnes West-Kohler are a few recent graduates) at Saint Paul's or visit the EfM web site. There you’ll find lots of information, including sample lessons.

A new EfM year will begin in early September. The incoming group of participants is already 50% booked. Registrations close in early August or when all available seats are reserved. For more information contact Mark Patzman at EfM.stpauls@outlook.com.

--Mark Patzman


Texts
Year 1 The Hebrew Bible
A Short Introduction to the Hebrew Bible John J. Collins

Year 2 The New Testament
Introducing the New Testament Mark Allan Powell

Year 3 Church History
Christianity: The First Three Thousand Years Diarmaid MacCulloch

Year 4 Theology
Theology: A Very Brief Introduction David Ford
Mysteries of Faith Mark McIntosh
The Christian Moral Life Timothy F. Sedgewick
My Neighbor’s Faith Peace, Rose, and Mobley

Interlude 1 Transformed Lives: Making Sense of Atonement Today Cynthia Crysdale
Interlude 2 Care for Creation Delio, Warner, and Wood

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

St Peter's Academy

Diocesan Education for Ministry Coordinator Cecil Keener recommends this upcoming event.

A new initiative at St. Peter's - The St. Peter's Academy. This would be ideal as the next stage up in Biblical Studies and Philosophical Theology/Apologetics, for EfM graduates!

St. Peter's Academy - Evening Classes for Inquiring Minds this Fall
St. Peter's Episcopal Church, Del Mar is launching a new initiative this fall - "St. Peter's Academy (SPA)" will offer informal college-level seminar-style evening classes for inquiring minds on various religious topics, taught by parishioner Dr. David Moseley. The first two classes offered by SPA will be The Problem of God: An Introduction to Philosophy of Religion (Wednesdays) and Exploring the Christian Scriptures: An Introduction to the New Testament (Thursdays). Classes will meet weekly, 6:30-9:00 p.m. from September 15th / 16th through December 22nd / 23rd in the upper classroom of the education building on the St. Peter’s Episcopal Church, Del Mar campus. The course will be multi-media, involving PowerPoint presentations, maps, slides, movie clips, visual art and music. Detailed handouts will be provided, reading requirements are minimal, and there will be no tests!

Full details about syllabus, schedule and enrollment can be found on the St. Peter's Academy webpage. Alternatively, for more information, please e-mail Dr. Moseley (djsmoseley@aim.com) or contact the Church Office: Tel. (858) 755-1616. You can download information packets for each class from the St Peter's website.

"The biblical characters and places in the New Testament became alive for me in David's class. He delivered the serious scholarship of the New Testament in an entertaining style such that I was mesmerized in every class." (Sun Spriggs, St. Peter's Parishioner)

Monday, May 24, 2010

EDUCATION for MINISTRY

Powerful words!

Webster’s tells us” Education” is an action or process of educating or of being educated. Ministry, according to Webster’s second description is “Instrumentality” a quality or state of being instrumental.

Hello my name is Cecil Keener I am the Education for Ministry Coordinator for the Episcopal Diocese of San Diego. I am also an Education for Ministry (EFM) Mentor at St Paul’s Cathedral. Those of us, who are not called to the priesthood and yet want to honor our baptismal vows, look for deeper meaning to our lives in an effort to fulfill them. When we say “Here I am send me” what exactly does that mean? Send me where? To do what? What am I capable of? Where do my talents lie?

The University of the South at Sewanee Tennessee has developed a correspondence course that enables you to delve into those very questions and decide just exactly what God is calling you to do!. The course is called Education for Ministry. Ministry in the “instrumental” form. Paul in his letters taught us that we are part of the Body of Christ. We are the visual representatives of the Gifts of God’s Grace to everyone we meet. How we conduct ourselves will affect” someone”. That is our Ministry! What does that mean exactly?

I invite you to investigate the EFM program. There are seven Mentors so far in the Diocese. We are currently planning for next year’s sessions. If you live in the following areas please contact one of us and we will be happy to answer your questions. There are online opportunities for anyone who has difficulty getting to a particular place.

Linda Nelson: Temecula lrnelsonfawn@yahoo.com

Sandy Smolinski: Sun City sandy.smolinski@leusd.k12.ca.us

Catherine Campbell, at Del Mar campbell953@gmail.com

Mary Wavrik, at Del Mar mwavrik@sbcglobal.net

Sue Anderson, at Del Mar nautisti@cox.net

Judy Preston, at San Diego JPreston@ascentrealestate.net

Cecil Keener, at San Diego cecil5@san.rr.com

Thank You and God Bless!

Cecil L Keener