Thursday, December 31, 2020

Witness, Share and Evangelize: Today in the Mission Yearbook - ‘Four for Four’ congregations feel a strong sense of Presbyterian connectedness

Witness, Share and Evangelize: Today in the Mission Yearbook - ‘Four for Four’ congregations feel a strong sense of Presbyterian connectedness: Remaining committed to Special Offerings December 31, 2020 Lauren Rogers, mission specialist for the Presbyterian Mission Agency, recognizes...

Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Witness, Share and Evangelize: Today in the Mission Yearbook - ‘Healing Hearts, Transforming Nations’

Witness, Share and Evangelize: Today in the Mission Yearbook - ‘Healing Hearts, Transforming Nations’: International School of Reconciliation in Rwanda workshop focuses on healing inner wounds December 30, 2020 The International School of Reco...

WCRC eNews: December 2020: Discernment Process Begins, Holiday Greetings, More

eNews: December 2020

 

WCRC begins extensive discernment process

“What does God Require of Us? Discerning, Confessing, and Witnessing in an Age of COVID-19 and Beyond,” the World Communion of Reformed Churches (WCRC)’s Communion-wide discernment process, began with a global online gathering and a call to prophetic action.

“We gather today to engage in thinking together, ‘What does the Lord require of us?’ We gather to affirm our steady journey toward justice,” said Najla Kassab, WCRC president. “Today is a moment of kairos, where we are called to act, and strive to heal the world of the long-lasting injustices that not even the vaccine will heal. It is our road to seek new ways of strengthening the Communion and transforming the world, to dream of new alternatives and new visions of a reality based on justice.”

Read more: ArabicBahasa IndonesiaDeutschEnglishEspañolFrançaisKorean

 

WCRC engages in 16 Days of Activism against Gender-based Violence.
General Secretary Ferguson: Embracing the advent of watchful discernment: DeutschEnglishEspañolFrançais
Member Church News: Advent and Christmas Blessings
Facebook
Facebook
Twitter
Twitter
Website
Website
Email
Email
Cameroon conference on peace empowers religious leaders.
President Kassab: Turning from Fear to Joy: DeutschEnglishEspañolFrançais
Copyright © 2020 World Communion of Reformed Churches, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because of your interest in the work of the World Communion of Reformed Churches.

Our mailing address is:
World Communion of Reformed Churches
Knochenhauerstr. 42
Hannover 30159
Germany

TCR Breaking News: Jackson Theological Seminary at North Little Rock receives candidate status by TRACS

TCR Breaking News: Jackson Theological Seminary at North Little Rock receives candidate status by TRACS

Jackson Theological Seminary at North Little Rock was awarded candidate status as a Category III institution by the TRACS (Transnational Association of Christian Schools) Accreditation Commission.

The status is effective for five years, according to a news release from the Rev. Cecil L. Williams Jr., president, and chief executive officer at Jackson seminary and pastor of St. John AME Church at Pine Bluff.

Jackson seminary received recognition earlier this year. TRACS is recognized by the United States Department of Education, the Council for Higher Education Accreditation, and the International Network for Quality Assurance Agencies in Higher Education, according to the release.

"Since 1903, Jackson has endeavored and successfully produced competent and capable ministers of the Gospel of Jesus the Christ. Notwithstanding its commitment to the mission, operations for JTS were held in abeyance from 2011-2017 to strategically align resources for the purposes of obtaining accreditation from a reputable, independent organization outside of our denomination," according to the release.

To meet its goals, a team was assembled to restart Jackson as an active institution. Classes resumed the fall of 2018. Jackson put in place a curriculum and operations intended to satisfy the standards for accreditation from TRACS. Students were enrolled in the master of divinity and bachelor of arts in biblical studies programs.

The institution's leaders include a board of trustees and its chairman, Bishop Michael Leon Mitchell, presiding prelate of the 12th Episcopal District of the African Methodist Episcopal Church; and Williams, Jackson seminary president and CEO.

In December 2019, the institution achieved applicant status with TRACS and proceeded toward achieving candidate status. In July 2020, Jackson Theological Seminary hosted an on-site evaluation team. The institution responded to all of the determinations in the evaluation team report and the accreditation commission granted the institution candidate status.

The Jackson Theological Seminary staff involved in the effort included the Rev. Robert Turner, chief academic officer and dean of student affairs; Sheila Washington, chief financial officer; the Rev. Charles Frost, registrar and director of academic records; the Rev. Daniel Johnson, graduate instructor; and the Rev. Charlene Boone, undergraduate instructor.

Breaking News: 6th Episcopal District Voter Outreach Efforts Featured on CNN

TCR Breaking News: 6th Episcopal District Voter Outreach Featured on CNN

Click here for the video associated with the article

(CNN)
Rev. Josh Saefkow walked across the stage before his congregation at Flat Creek Baptist Church in Fayetteville, Georgia, a suburb of Atlanta, holding up the front page of the Atlanta Journal Constitution. The pastor, an avid news reader, had been saving the paper through 2020, to urge reflection in his final Sunday sermon of the year.

"What a devastating year this has been," he said, then turned to 2021.

"We got a little election coming up," said Saefkow, referring to the January 5 Senate runoffs. Quiet laughter rippled through the pews, as few have been unable to escape the more than $500 million in political advertising blanketing the state.

"Vote Christian," urged the pastor. "We need to vote with the context of scripture in our minds and let it come through the lens of scripture."

While not mentioning by party or name whom they should vote for, congregants told CNN they know who this conservative Baptist pastor was talking about.

"I always vote for the candidate who most aligns with my Christian faith. In this runoff especially, I'm voting for the candidates who are pro-life," said Allison Yates. Those candidates with anti-abortion rights stances, she added, are Republican incumbent Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler.

Churches, especially evangelical churches in Georgia, have been a potent force among the electorate. According to the CNN exit poll from the 2020 election, about one-third of the electorate in November was White evangelical or born-again Christian. Republicans won about 85% of their votes.

But Black voter turnout in November, especially in the Atlanta suburbs, helped tip the scale for President-elect Joe Biden, with voter registration groups like the New Georgia Project partnering with churches to reach Black Christian voters. In the runoffs, voter registration groups targeting Black voters have continued to work with churches to hold registration drives and host the Democratic candidates in their parking lots.

In the Bible Belt, Georgia remains a state where nearly 80% of its residents identify as Christian, and where politics for preachers on both sides of the political aisle find a natural correlation, especially with the control of the US Senate at stake. Should Democrats flip both Senate seats, Vice President Kamala Harris would be the tie-breaking vote, giving Democrats control of the White House and both chambers of Congress.

"For me, it's not about being political, it's about being Biblical," said Saefkow. "I think it's advantageous for all us followers of Jesus to elect people who represent our world view. We've become more engaged as a church family so we can make an educated decision in the voting booth but also being framed in the scripture."

The pastor said he will not explicitly tell his church members who to vote for, but openly disagrees with both the Democratic challengers, Jon Ossoff and Rev. Raphael Warnock, on issues like abortion. Both candidates support abortion rights. Saefkow takes the sharpest departure with Warnock, in part, because both men share their Christian faith.

"I think he's a gifted orator. I think he's a gifted communicator," said Saefkow, "but not the best student of scripture. It's not about Rev. Warnock, it's about what the scripture says. For me, he veers off there, when you look at the issue of life. I think he's wrong on that."

The issue of abortion is a powerful driver to the ballot box not just for the pastor personally, but for the religious right in Georgia, believes Saefkow.

'A lot of people look to the church for guidance'

About 40 minutes to the north of Flat Creek Baptist Church, Rev. Vandy Simmons of Antioch AME Church, called out evangelicals for their emphasis on abortion.

"We're challenging our so-called evangelical brothers and sisters. We're challenging them to be better. We're challenging them not to hide behind something called pro-life," preached Simmons, from his Sunday pulpit. "Where you're more concerned about the life you can't see instead of making provisions for the life that come into this world."

For the parishioners here, attacks on Warnock's abortion rights position are nonsensical.

"As much as they make an argument about life in the womb, in the midst of this pandemic they're opposed to wearing face masks. They're opposed to the guidelines from the (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) so therefore, we have had almost 400,000 people that have died," Bishop Reginald Jackson told CNN. "So, you're saying we're more concerned about the life in the womb than we are about the lives outside the womb?" he asked rhetorically. "I preach, teach, counsel, advocate against abortion. But at the same time, I believe, ultimately, that is that woman's decision to make."

Loeffler doubled down on the religious divide during the only televised debate in the Senate runoffs with Warnock. "Look, I'm not going to be lectured by someone who uses the Bible to justify abortion," Loeffler began her argument.

"Listen," Warnock said as part of a broader response to the attack. "I have a profound reverence for life and abiding respect for choice. The question is, whose decision is it."

Christian Democrats have emphasized health care, economic justice and criminal justice reform. Delivery on those issues lies on whether the coalition that handed President-elect Joe Biden Georgia in November turns out in January.

Jackson minced no words on who leads that coalition for Democrats in Georgia, speaking to the congregation at Antioch AME Church on Sunday. "The eyes of the nation are waiting to see if Black folk are going to turn out for the runoff like you turned out in November," he said from the pulpit. "All I want to say to them is come and see."

Jackson oversees nearly 90,000 church members in the Georgia's 6th Episcopal District of the AME Church. "There will be huge turnout among Blacks and the church is giving leadership to that effort," he said of the January 5 election.

The message has not been lost on the faithful listening from the pews, only a small and socially distanced congregation allowed into the sanctuary due to Covid-19. Lynnise Gamble, in attendance at Sunday's service, told CNN, "I've been hearing it since before November. We've been talking about voting, voting, voting. A lot of people look to the church for guidance and so it's very important to get that word out."

From the tiered stage of Antioch AME's sanctuary, a choir of women in ruby red dresses raised their voices in song. "His plan, His plan for me is victory!" they sang.
"The heat is on, church. We want to be ready, church," urged the woman at the mic. "Because the whole world is counting on us to make the Senate blue."

Living Lutheran Weekly Email Digest

December 29, 2020
Facebook Twitter YouTube Instagram Email

Lectionary blog: On remembering the old promises

Article
Lectionary for Dec. 27, 2020 First Sunday of Christmas Isaiah 61:10-62:3; Psalm 148; Galatians 4:4-7; Luke 2:22-40 For the first Sunday of Christmas, a time when we live into and practice many … continue
Ad Unit

A message of solidarity

Article
Series editor’s note: Throughout 2020, “Deeper understandings” has engaged the ELCA’s commitment to authentic diversity. —Kathryn A. Kleinhans, dean of Trinity Lutheran Seminary at Capital … continue
Ad Unit

Christmas trees of giving

Article
Gary Heard’s previous congregation, Advent Lutheran in Manhattan, decided to try selling Christmas trees in the mid-1990s as a fundraiser to bolster the church budget. “We were struggling … continue
Ad Unit
Living LutheranLiving Lutheran
Connect
Facebook Twitter YouTube Instagram Email

Tuesday, December 29, 2020

Reset to Love - Enter the New Year Intentionally with Ghost Ranch - Virtual December 30, 31 and January 1

image

I REALLY MISS GHOST RANCH

GOODBYE 2020 & HELLO 2021

Hello Friend,

It is my honor to return as a Ghost Ranch instructor and to once again offer a New Year’s Eve Retreat, this time virtual.

I invite you to join me as we bask in the warmth, beauty and power of love over the New Year’s Eve turning with Reset to Love. During our time together, we will relax into sacred space to create our vision for 2021, beginning with that which we love, and gives us purpose. Stepping into the new year with heart and mind in sync with new tools will unleash waves of positive change. We are ready for them. I hope you can join us.

Give yourself a gift and enter 2021 with an intentional and joyful virtual retreat!

Marla Durden

This event includes three uniques sessions.
December 30 - 4:00-7:00 p.m. (MST)
December 31 - 11:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. (MST)
January 1 - 11:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. (MST)

Fee is $195.00, add $50 to help someone else attend or subtract $50 if you need scholarship assistance.

PS. Need more info - Please view the video below to learn more. Register within the next 24 hours and receive a free gift.

Using the tools of the heart… poetry, journaling, ritual, story, journeys, contemplative practices and play, we will mindfully cross into the new year, refreshed, renewed and centered in our love. Balancing it all with the power of thoughtful intention, bring closure to 2020 and chart a direction for your love in 2021 and beyond.

RESET TO LOVE:
A New Year's Eve Journey of the Heart + Mind
with Marla Durden

image
 

FROM THE TRADING POST

Ghost Ranch Journal
Spiral notebook with 100 lined pages, elastic band to keep pages together and calendar in back. Hardcover front and back provides sturdy surface. Includes what may become your favorite pen!

BUY NOW

The National Ghost Ranch Foundation is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization and our tax identification number is 23-7188767. To reduce excess mailings we send our sustaining supporters a summary of their annual giving and complete tax acknowledgment at the end of each calendar year.