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News

Eastern Mennonite Seminary Pennsylvania Extension Approved for Graduate Level Courses

October 18, 2008 by Conference Office

by Laura Lehman Amstutz, Eastern Mennonite Seminary

Eastern Mennonite Seminary’s (EMS) extension site in Lancaster, Pa., has received approval to offer a fully-accredited, three-year master of divinity degree. This achievement culminates more than two years of work and offers new possibilities for students preparing for pastoral work or other areas of Christian ministry.

In spring 2006, EMS applied to the Pennsylvania Department of Education for approval to offer two graduate certificates and the MDiv. degree. EMS also petitioned the Association of Theological Schools (ATS) national accrediting agency. This culminated in site visits in the spring of 2008 of delegations from the Department of Education and ATS.

In their separate approval processes, both organizations commended EMS for “the quality of its program, instructors and students.”

“A growing number of students from Mennonite and other churches in southeastern Pennsylvania have expressed interest in earning a graduate certificate or MDiv. degree from EMS,” said Mark R. Wenger, director of pastoral studies at the Lancaster branch. “However, many students find it not viable to move or commute to the main campus in Virginia.”

For the MDiv degree program, EMS in Pennsylvania has negotiated cooperative arrangements with accredited seminaries in the area, including Lancaster Theological Seminary; Evangelical Theological Seminary, Myerstown, Pa.; and Biblical Seminary, Hatfield, Pa. EMS students can take seminary courses at these seminaries and receive credit at EMS.

The official notification letter by Dr. Gerald Zahorchak of the Pennsylvania Department of Education stated, “I wish you success with the degree programs and the certificate programs and know that they will be administered to reflect the high academic quality which is the standard of Eastern Mennonite University.”

When she heard the news, EMS student Misty Wintsch, associate pastor at Mechanic Grove Church of the Brethren, Quarryville, Pa., responded, “A great big YEEHA! I couldn’t be more thrilled.”

Student Julie Dunst from Reading, Pa., wrote: “Congratulations! It is well earned. I am eager to see what your offerings are in the future.”

EMS in Pennsylvania currently offers two or three graduate-level seminary courses each semester in addition to other pastoral training programs. Students can earn a graduate certificate, which requires 24 credit hours, in about two years. Certificates in Biblical Studies and Theological Studies are now offered in addition to the MDiv. degree.

Seminary Dean Ervin R. Stutzman said, “I am very grateful for the dedicated and cooperative workers at the Lancaster extension,” EMS dean Ervin R. Stutzman said. “I offer my congratulations to everyone on completing the difficult tasks necessary for this approval.”

Filed Under: News Tagged With: National News

Mennonite Church USA to join other denominations at interchurch peace gathering to challenge local, global violence

October 15, 2008 by Conference Office

By June Galle Krehbiel for Mennonite Church USA

Mennonite Church USA and other historic peace churches are inviting U.S. Christian leaders to participate in Heeding God’s Call: A Gathering on Peace, Jan. 13 to 17 in Philadelphia, Pa.

Mennonite Church USA, the Church of the Brethren and the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) are co-sponsoring this peace gathering. All U.S. member churches that are part of Mennonite World Conference, including Conservative Mennonite Conference, Mennonite Brethren and Brethren in Christ, as well as other Anabaptist groups have been invited to send representatives. Franconia Conference Director of Congregational Resourcing and Equipping, Ertell Whigham and Aldo Siahaan, pastor of Philadelphia Praise Center will represent Franconia Conference at this gathering. Siahaan attended a similar gathering held in Indonesia last year.

“The Philadelphia gathering is for Christian leaders to discern God’s leading regarding our witness for peace during a time of escalating violence,” says J. Fred Kauffman, who works for Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) East Coast and represents Mennonite Church USA on the peace gathering’s executive committee.

The initial vision for this event came from the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting which invited Brethren and Mennonites to co-sponsor the gathering. The stated purpose is “strengthening our witness and work for peace in the world by inspiring hope, raising voices, taking action.”

Planners expect around 600 registrants, half of them from the three sponsoring denominations. The other 300 will represent various Christian traditions. Those invited include member bodies of the National Council of Churches, other denominations with membership over 100,000 as well as denominational peace fellowships and several ecumenical peace/justice organizations.

The gathering will include morning worship, plenary sessions, panel discussions, workshops and small groups as well as written summaries of the meetings’ common concerns.

“Pray that, as Christians from many backgrounds and persuasions meet, we indeed hear Jesus’ call to peacemaking. We need to find public ways to speak to our time and challenge the idolatry of nation-worship and its violence,” Kauffman says. “My personal hope is that participants will be open to the movement of God’s Spirit, lift up Jesus as Savior and Lord and issue a ringing call for local and global peacemaking to the church in the United States.”

The late Martin Luther King, Jr.’s vision for peace lies at the heart of the mid-January gathering. The national holiday on Jan. 19, 2009, marks King’s birth and commemorates his role as spokesperson for the nonviolent civil rights movement. King colleague and historian Vincent Harding from Denver, Colo., who worked with his wife, Rosemarie, in representing the Mennonite church in the civil rights movement, will serve as elder for the gathering.

Registrants will gather Saturday, Jan. 17, to worship in a public place with local congregations and participate in a peace action to speak out against handgun violence. Organizing the Saturday public witness is Church of God in Christ leader Elisha Morris of the Philadelphia Anti-Drug/Anti-Violence Network.

“Mennonites have brought to the planning process a passion to address not only international peace but also peace on the streets,” Kauffman says. “We live in the midst of fear and violence in our nation and our own communities. Christ calls us to confront this culture of violence with the peace that he promised, a peace that is not like the ‘peace’ of this world.”

Besides Kauffman, Mennonites on committees to plan the gathering include: Michelle Armster of Conciliation Services; Bertha Beachy of Mennonite Central Committee U.S.Assembly Mennonite Church, Goshen, Ind.; Drick Boyd and Andy Peifer of West Philadelphia (Pa.) Mennonite Fellowship; Leo Hartshorn of Mennonite Mission Network; Susan Mark Landis, Mennonite Church USA Peace Advocate; Hubert Schwartzendruber of Plains Mennonite Church, Hatfield, Pa.; and Ruth Wenger of North Bronx (N.Y.) Mennonite Church.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: National News

October 17-19 is Homecoming Weekend at Christopher Dock Mennonite High School

October 15, 2008 by Conference Office

Activities will be available for the whole community, including a Fall concert Friday evening; campus visits, an art show, a soccer match with Lansdale Catholic and children’s activities, including the live exotic animal show Animal Junction, on Saturday afternoon; and an Open House and Community Hymn Sing on Sunday afternoon.

A complete schedule of activities is included below and can also be found at www.dockhs.org. Call 215-362-2675 for more information.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Conference News

Penn Foundation presents a workshop on "Embracing Diversity" in the workplace

October 14, 2008 by Conference Office

On Saturday, October 28, Penn Foundation will present a workshop entitled Embracing Diversity: The Key to Meeting Your Company’s Complex Needs. This workshop is a part of Penn Foundation’s Employee Assistance Program (EAP) which provides “state-of-the-art support to meet the unique needs of area business owners.”

Led by Penn Foundation’s EAP Counselor Gigi Farrow, the workshop will address the daunting yet rewarding task of embracing diversity in the business field. As the workshop outlines the key components needed to become a leader in today’s multicultural market participants will explore such topics as inclusivity, fairness, recruiting and training and analyzing a company’s strengths and areas for growth.

The workshop will be held from 8:00 am to 1:00 pm at Penn foundation’s Grundy Auditorium in Sellersville, Pa. The registration fee is $35.00 non-members and $25.00 Penn Foundation EAP Members and includes a continental breakfast at 8:00 am and lunch at Noon. For more information or to register for this event please call 215-257-6556 or email eap@pennfoundation.org. The registration is October 21, 2008.

For more information about the Penn Foundation and the EAP program, please visit our web site at www.pennfoundation.org or call 215-257-6556.

For more info on the School of Leadership Formation click here

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Conference News

Stucky featured at annual Youth Leadership Retreat

October 5, 2008 by Conference Office

The annual Youth Leadership Retreat, sponsored by Franconia Conference with Eastern District and Atlantic Coast Conferences is set for November 21-23 at Spruce Lake Retreat, Canadensis, Pa. Nate Stucky, current intern with Franconia Conference and student at Princeton (NJ) Theological Seminary, is the featured presenter. Nate served as a youth pastor with Holly Grove Mennonite Church, Westover, Md. (an Atlantic Coast Conference congregation) and interned this summer at Zion Mennonite Church in Souderton, Pa (an Eastern District Conference congregation). The theme for the year is LOOK.

The Youth Leadership Retreat draws high school youth leaders along with youth pastors and congregational youth volunteer leaders to the Poconos for equipping and conversation. This year’s event also features a workshop by Julie Prey-Harbaugh on child/youth protection, Jeremy Kempf from Mennonite Mission Network leading worship and numerous seminars intended to nurture and cultivate youth leadership gifts and skills. Saturday seminars for youth will be led by Jon Heinly, Lancaster Mennonite Conference Minister for Youth, Ron Hertzler, teacher at Christopher Dock Mennonite High School and Laura Rush who works with the Community Service Foundation.

For more info click HERE!

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Conference News

Hunter Bowman honored for servant leadership by Goshen College

October 5, 2008 by Conference Office

–Tyler Falk

GOSHEN, Ind. – Their lives have taken them to an antiviral research lab in Chicago, a university in Lithuania, impoverished countries around the world, violence-stricken communities in Colombia, an elementary school in Colorado and college sporting events. During Goshen College’s annual Homecoming celebration on Oct. 3-5, seven outstanding alumni will be honored for their service, achievements and contributions.

The 2008 Decade of Servant Leadership Award will be received by Janna Hunter-Bowman ’00, who currently resides in Bogotá, Colombia and is from Bally, Pa. The award, created in 2004, recognizes a Goshen College alumnus or alumna whose contributions and achievements in career, public or church service and volunteer activities early in post-graduate life – during or prior to their 10th class reunion year – are worthy of recognition.

Janna Hunter-Bowman

After Janna Hunter-Bowman, a member of Bally (Pa) Mennonite Church graduated from Goshen College in 2000 with a degree in anthropology and sociology she knew she wanted to do something different and meaningful. “I first learned of Colombian Mennonites through a letter sent to U.S. churches in 2000. It warned that, if passed, the bill before the U.S. Congress for ‘Plan Colombia’ (a military aid package) would make the work of Colombian peace builders more difficult and dangerous,” Hunter-Bowman said. “At the time I was longing for more radical peace action from the North American Mennonite church. Upon learning of this politically astute and action-oriented Mennonite community, I wanted to participate.”

In 2001, Hunter-Bowman moved to Bogotá, Colombia to work with Justapaz, a Christian Center for Justice, Peace and Nonviolent Action. She was active in developing a program that advocates public policy changes to promote peace in Colombia based in primary source documentation of human rights violations against churches. Along with this, she also documents stories of faith-based peace initiatives throughout Colombia. “The goal of the documentation program is to contribute to truth, justice and a nonviolent solution to the armed conflict,” Hunter-Bowman said. “The real-life stories are our foundation for the recommendations we make to governments – both here in Colombia and internationally.” Since she began working with Justapaz in 2001, she started a sister peace church program and has worked as the international education and advocacy program coordinator, in which she investigates the effects of U.S. policy on churches and civil society in general. “Janna’s documentation work with Justapaz is of the utmost significance in what remains one of the world’s most difficult conflicts,” said Goshen College Professor of Peace, Justice and Conflict Studies Joe Liechty ’78, who learned to know her during a visit to Columbia. “Janna does all her work with contagious joy, conviction and warmth. That she should be engaged at so deep a level in another society at so young an age is very impressive. She exudes GC’s core values.”

After spending six years in Colombia, she has fallen in love with the country and its people. “Colombia offers the world more than coffee and cocaine,” Hunter-Bowman said. “The enduring faithful who creatively confront the death-dealing powers to transform conflict and seek peace have much to teach us. They both invite and indict. They invite radical discipleship that gives hope; they indict the narratives of imperial power, lies and tepid Christianity.”

Hunter-Bowman lives in Colombia with her husband Jess and her 7-month-old daughter Amara, and attends Teusaquillo Mennonite Church.

Filed Under: News

Kriss invites students to the real and now at Bluffton University

October 5, 2008 by Conference Office

–Andrea Ressler, Bluffton University

“Everything is changing,” said Steve Kriss, director of communication and leadership cultivation for the Franconia Conference of Mennonite Church USA, to Bluffton University students and community members during the institution’s weekly Forum series on Sept. 16. “You’ll be in a web of relationships and connected like no generations before you. You’ll rethink how you understand families, lives, actions and behaviors. Your whole life will be redefined.” Learning to embrace uncomfortable moments, as well as resulting change in the church was the basis for Kriss’ presentation, “Stumbling Toward and Glimpsing a Real Future in the Present Moment.”

As director of communication and leadership cultivation, Kriss works with Mennonite churches to develop individuals’ leadership potential and multiethnic faith communities. In working with multiethnic churches and settings which he acknowledges it can be challenging, as language barriers and ethnocentrism factors in. “Individuals need to recognize that their given nationality and tongue isn’t better than another’s, rather it is different,” said Kriss. “De-centering and recognizing the needs of others is an important part of the growth process of both individuals and churches.”

As Christians, Kriss said individuals are called to follow Jesus—a calling that can be uncomfortable. “One’s faith, life and ability to love are what bring Christians into reality,” he said. “If Christians can not break the barriers between what is going on in the world and what is happening to us on a personal level, then we will not be able to figure out the way in the church in a new day,” said Kriss. A shift toward multiethnic churches forces members to rethink how they have always done things. Kriss reminded the audience that the gospel calls Christians to be teachers, students and servants all at once and all the time.

Kriss spoke about the Philadelphia Praise Center, in Philadelphia, Pa., a church that incorporates Spanish, English, Mandarin and Indonesian languages during its services. This church experience requires growth by the individuals speaking and those listening, as all are reliant upon translation at some point. What is important is that individuals be willing and able to represent the Good News to others, even if the manners in which they are sharing are new and different.

Kriss suggested that “being the church” involves trying to figure out the “complex issues to following Jesus in a complex world.” “Languages are complex,” he said, “and pushing yourself to embrace them is pushing yourself to expand the kingdom of God.”

In closing, Kriss said that Christians are invited to experience God in ways that are different from their own. “We are invited to do the unfolding of the reign of God in this time,” said Kriss. “We are invited to be uncomfortable and to figure out what it means to be in the church; to be in the place of the real and now.”

Filed Under: News Tagged With: National News

“Live the Selfless Way of Christ,” Dow Tells Seminary Community

September 29, 2008 by Conference Office

Laura Leaman Amstutz, Eastern Mennonite Seminary

“It is impossible to follow Christ while fulfilling the demands of the American dream,” said Leonard Dow, pastor at Oxford Circle Mennonite Church in Philadelphia, Pa. He addressed students, faculty and staff at Eastern Mennonite Seminary in Spiritual life Week services, Sept. 23-25. Oxford Circle is a partner in mission congregation with Franconia Conference.

“All upward mobility is resistant to the way of Christ,” said Dow in the opening chapel service. He described his upbringing in North Philadelphia and the temptations he faced to follow the values of the television show, “The Jeffersons,” and keep “moving on up” in society.

Using a translation of John 1:14 from “The Message” by Eugene Peterson, Dow described how this is exactly opposite to the way of Christ: “’The message’ says, ‘The Word became flesh and moved into the neighborhood.’” He described Christ’s downward mobility and the way Christ continually reached out to the disenfranchised around him.

“Jesus’ call to discipleship is not about being a little bit Christ-like,” Dow said. “Jesus called us individually and as a body to be living Christs.”

In a special chapel titled “The Selfless Way of Christ- the Temptation to be Relevant,” Dow preached from Luke 4:1-14, the temptation of Jesus in the wilderness. He described Jesus being tempted to turn rocks into bread as an enticement to be relevant, to do something productive.

“The world would have us believe that achievements are the most important aspect of who we are,” said Dow. “But not in God’s eyes.

“There is a temptation to run our churches like a business,” he continued, “because we want to be relevant and be able to measure our success.”

“Our primary goal is not to be relevant,” said Dow. “Our goal is to be significant.”

Dow concluded the series by speaking on “The Selfless Way of Christ – the Temptation of Excess,” focusing on the temptation to be powerful and the temptation to be spectacular.

“We like the spectacular,” said Dow. “We desire God to be spectacular but we lose sight of God in the ordinary. We need God to dwell with us in the ordinary.”

Dow also cited the temptation to seek power.

“We say to Christ, ‘I want to be more like you, except the difficult parts,’” Dow said. “As followers of Jesus, I want you to allow the Lord to reign in your lives. It isn’t enough to imitate Jesus or to be inspired by Jesus. To confess Jesus we are to be living Christs here and now, in our time.”

Dow is a 1987 graduate of Eastern Mennonite University. His chapel messages are available online as podcasts at https://emu.edu/blog/podcast/2008.

Spiritual Life Week is an annual event at Eastern Mennonite Seminary. In addition to hearing a guest speaker, students and faculty participate in a Wednesday afternoon retreat to discuss the theme for the week.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: National News

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