Saturday, May 28, 2011

Young Adult Friends Gathering Video Series – Two YAFs Reflect

By Micah Bales

This video is the eighth in a series put together from footage and interviews taken during the 2010 Young Adult Friends Gathering in Wichita, Kansas. This gathering took place over the 2010 Memorial Day Weekend and was perhaps the most diverse and balanced YAF gathering in generations. Roughly equal numbers of Liberal-Unprogrammed, Pastoral and Evangelical Friends were in attendance, along with a small number of Conservative Friends.

This video includes interviews with two Young Adult Friends who share their experiences of the 2010 YAF Gathering.

For more information about the 2010 YAF Gathering, please check out the official website, which features the advance materials that Friends were asked to use in their preparation for the conference, as well as the epistle that those gathered issued at the end of the weekend.

Micah BalesMicah Bales serves as Coordinator of Young Adult Engagement at ESR. He lives in Washington, DC with his wife, Faith Kelley. He is active with Capitol Hill Friends and is a member of Rockingham Friends Meeting, Ohio Yearly Meeting.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

A Visit to Wilmington Yearly Meeting

By Valerie Hurwitz

During the summer, faculty, administrators, students and alumni from Earlham School of Religion travel to many Yearly Meeting sessions.  In addition, we’ll also be at events such as the FUM Triennial, and a group from ESR will be traveling to Kenya and Rwanda to visit with Friends there.  Now that the academic year is quieting down, we’ll be bringing you more news from the road!

April 29-May 1, I attended Wilmington Yearly Meeting in Wilmington, OH.  Wilmington is an FUM-affiliated pastoral meeting that has part of its meetings in Ohio, and one Quarterly Meeting in Tennessee.  As you can imagine the Tennessee quarter has events centered around their meetings, and the Ohio quarters have events centered around their meetings.  People work to get to know each other across the distance, but find that this is sometimes a barrier.  The Yearly Meeting summer sessions trades off meeting in Ohio and Tennessee.  April, as you might notice, is a little early for a northern-ish yearly meeting.  Wilmington Yearly Meeting is incredibly excited to be hosting the FUM Triennial this July, and decided that in order to avoid having the Yearly Meeting business sessions and Triennial back-to-back, they would meet now for an abbreviated time.

Wilmington College is affiliated with the yearly meeting, and is the home of the Quaker Heritage Center, a Peace Center, and a Quaker Leader Scholars Program.  If you are ever traveling in that area, it’s worth stopping by the Quaker Heritage Center to see what they have on display.  The Peace Center has artifacts from Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and also does conflict mediation training with children.  Dan Kasztelan, an ESR alum and campus minister, runs the Quaker Leader Scholarship program, which creates a cohort of Quakers attending Wilmington that do community service projects together, as well as community-building exercises.  The Yearly Meeting has some wonderful resources right in its backyard!

The first event I attended was a visioning exercise.  The yearly meeting has lost membership in recent years and is having serious and thoughtful conversations about envisioning the future of the Yearly Meeting.  Friends were asked to consider what are the things they like best about the yearly meeting, and what are the things they like least (or, as I would prefer to say, “the things that can be improved”).  Some of the big positives that arose in discussion were the assistance the yearly meeting gives, fellowship with other Friends, the informality of the yearly meetings, the training and recording process, and the feeling that the Spirit is moving in Wilmington Yearly Meeting.  People discussed wanting to improve the fellowship, especially between those in Ohio and those in Tennessee.  There is also a concern about keeping the Yearly Meeting relevant, about encouraging gifts (pastoral and otherwise), reflecting simplicity and Christ in the Yearly Meeting (simplifying committee structure, for example), sharing Quaker beliefs with others, and encouraging Yearly Meeting youth.  This is difficult and necessary work, and Friends were very kind to each other in this process.

That evening was the banquet, and the Quaker Leader Scholars from Wilmington College spoke about how much this program means to them.  Dan also showed a slideshow of events and travels from the last year, and I was glad to see several pictures from their trip to the YAF Gathering in Wichita, KS last May!  On Saturday the yearly meeting conducted a Bible study and their business sessions.  Wilmington YM had a limited amount of time this year for business, and encouraged Friends not to read their reports, but to summarize and move quickly.  Friends, they finished their business sessions with two hours to spare!  (Clerks, take note!)

I also wanted to share a bit of what ESR student Jon Goff (and pastor of Maryville Friends) told me about the Wilmington YM recording process.  Jon and I spoke about this during the YM sessions, and he summarized later over Facebook:

“ . . . WYM records ministers in the areas of Pastoral Minister, Chaplain, and Evangelist. I believe that's all for now, though there's been talk of other areas.

“Within each of these there are a variety of readings based on a core curriculum that each recording candidate needs to go through. I don't know the specifics of the Chaplain and Evangelist track, but in the Pastoral Minister track, some of the areas to read include Old and New Testament, Church History, Pastoral Care, Theology, Friends Studies, etc. A certain amount of reading is required in each field, which basically translates to one book each, chosen by the candidate . . . In addition, George Fox's Journal, John Woolman's Journal, and Barclay's Apology are specifically assigned. In addition to the reading, a three page report is written on each book/reading that's completed.  [It should be noted that Jon completed these requirements through ESR’s MDiv curriculum.]

“ . . . In addition, a seasoned Friend agrees to serve as a "Counselor Friend," a mentor to the candidate, meeting regularly (at least once a month, I believe, though I met with mine once a week for a lot of it) to discuss how ministry is going, serve as a sounding board and give guidance about any questions that may come up. Upon completion of the curriculum (reading and writings) and the recommendation of the Counselor Friend, the Training and Recording Committee meets to discuss recommending the candidate to YM Ministry and Counsel; approval is followed by approval, and then the recommendation comes before the Yearly Meeting at large for approval, followed by a recognition during Yearly Meeting Sessions.”

Two things struck me about this.  The first is the recognition of specific tracks within recorded ministry, not limited to pastoral ministry.  ESR’s MDiv/MMin program has several emphases: pastoral ministry, unprogrammed ministry, religious leadership, writing, pastoral care, spirituality, and peace and justice studies.  ESR works to acknowledge the breadth of different types of ministry not only in Quakerism, but also in the larger Church.  The second is the academic and interpersonal aspects of the recording process.  Candidates both must develop an academic background in relevant areas and spend time with a seasoned minister to give guidance.

Does your yearly meeting record ministers?  What is the process?  What do you think the process of recording ministers should ideally look like?

Valerie Hurwitz

Valerie Hurwitz is Director of Recruitment and Admissions at Earlham School of Religion. She lives in Richmond, Indiana and serves as choir director at West Richmond Friends Meeting.

Friday, May 20, 2011

Young Adult Friends Gathering Video Series – Sunday Evening and Monday Departure

By Micah Bales

This video is the seventh in a series put together from footage and interviews taken during the 2010 Young Adult Friends Gathering in Wichita, Kansas. This gathering took place over the 2010 Memorial Day Weekend and was perhaps the most diverse and balanced YAF gathering in generations. Roughly equal numbers of Liberal-Unprogrammed, Pastoral and Evangelical Friends were in attendance, along with a small number of Conservative Friends.

This video documents the close of the weekend gathering, with some reflections on the importance of the event.

For more information about the 2010 YAF Gathering, please check out the official website, which features the advance materials that Friends were asked to use in their preparation for the conference, as well as the epistle that those gathered issued at the end of the weekend.

Micah BalesMicah Bales serves as Coordinator of Young Adult Engagement at ESR. He lives in Washington, DC with his wife, Faith Kelley. He is active with Capitol Hill Friends and is a member of Rockingham Friends Meeting, Ohio Yearly Meeting.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Friday, May 13, 2011

Young Adult Friends Gathering Video Series – Sunday Morning and Afternoon

By Micah Bales

This video is the sixth in a series put together from footage and interviews taken during the 2010 Young Adult Friends Gathering in Wichita, Kansas. This gathering took place over the 2010 Memorial Day Weekend and was perhaps the most diverse and balanced YAF gathering in generations. Roughly equal numbers of Liberal-Unprogrammed, Pastoral and Evangelical Friends were in attendance, along with a small number of Conservative Friends.

In this video, we see footage from Sunday morning and afternoon, when YAFs joined University Friends Meeting for Bible study and worship.

For more information about the 2010 YAF Gathering, please check out the official website, which features the advance materials that Friends were asked to use in their preparation for the conference, as well as the epistle that those gathered issued at the end of the weekend.

Micah BalesMicah Bales serves as Coordinator of Young Adult Engagement at ESR. He lives in Washington, DC with his wife, Faith Kelley. He is active with Capitol Hill Friends and is a member of Rockingham Friends Meeting, Ohio Yearly Meeting.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Congratulations to ESR's 2011 Graduates

ESR celebrated graduation this past Saturday in the Earlham Wellness Center. This followed two days already rich with celebration, including the annual spring banquet on Thursday evening, and the Baccalaureate dinner and service on Friday evening. 

The graduation ceremony, which is usually held outdoors on Chase Stage, was moved inside due to the rainy spring we have had here in Richmond. ESR graduate Elizabeth Code delivered the invocation and, along with other representatives, graduate Kim Hampton welcomed the audience on behalf of ESR. In the absence of Jay Marshall, Dean of ESR, who has been on a six-month sabbatical, Tim Seid, Associate Dean, assisted President Bennett in the ceremony for the ESR graduates. Each graduate was first hooded by Phil Baisley, Assistant Professor of Pastoral Ministry, and April Vanlonden, Director of Academic Service, and were handed their diploma by Earlham President Doug Bennett. 



CLICK HERE for a full slide show of
baccalaureate and graduation photos


This year's ESR graduates are: Robin Leigh Anderson, Gabriella Gabos Cahaley, Rebecca Sue Clouse, Elizabeth Thompson Code, Patricia B. Cox, Michele A. Graham, Kimberly Rochelle Hampton, Amanda Kelly, Harold Eugene Thompson, Jr., Adam Brooks Webber, Patty Christiena Willis, David Edward Wunker, Vivian Kay Wyatt. Those expecting to graduate in December 2011 include Mary L. Collins, Bruce Edward Heckman, Rachel Elizabeth Gagné Stacy, and Silas Siboe Wanjala.

Congratulations and best wishes in your ministry!

Monday, May 9, 2011

Acting for Peace, Resisting the War Tax

By Diane Reynolds
The United States can lead the way to putting an end to wars, said Quaker activist Steve Olshewsky at a recent Peace Forum, held at ESR.
Olshewsky is a person who acts on his convictions. When he realized, years ago, as a public  accountant, how much of the average taxpayer’s earnings—about half our tax dollars-- funds warfare, he sprang into action. Since then, he has made it his life’s work to push for passage of the Peace Tax Fund Act.
This act, (HR 1191) would allow a person who was registered as a conscientious objector to have his or her war taxes put into a special fund that would be used for other government expenses. Nobody would escape paying taxes, but nobody with religious objections to war would be forced to financially support defense activities that violated their consciences. Olshewsky believes that if the U.S. would establish such a fund, it would set a worldwide standard that other countries would follow.
Olshewsky’s message-- Don’t be discouraged, do speak truth to power, change can happen--can be hard to listen in hard times, but it’s worth hearing. Olshewsky spoke to the difference ordinary citizens have made in recent history, as when Rep. Barney Frank signed on as a co-sponsor to the Peace Tax Fund bill because of letters from Friends.
At the forum, Olshewsky gave out brightly colored construction paper and pens and asked all who were so moved to write letters to Congress for sponsorship of HR 1191. Olshewsky, who said he visits every member of Congress at least once a year, promised to hand deliver the letters.
I found the “I want to believe” side of my soul stirred by Olshewsky’s enthusiasm and conviction. Can an average person circulating through the halls of Congress—a mere drop in the bucket among 300 million citizens—make a difference? Olshewsky answers with a loud yes. “No witness for conscience is ever lost,” he says. “Your voice is so powerful.” As I think back to the kind of changes early Quakers made—ensuring a degree of religious freedom, founding colonies, freeing slaves—I think, yes, perhaps we too can enact change in our times.
But the disconnect is often between the desire for change and knowing what more we can do, here and now, amid busy schedules.  The challenge is for Quaker organizations to meet volunteers where they are. Where and how can we use our energy to help in concrete ways to usher in a more peaceful world?

Diane Reynolds is a student in Earlham School of Religion’s Master of Divinity program. She maintains a personal blog, Emerging Quaker.