Showing posts with label Great Emergence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Great Emergence. Show all posts
Saturday, February 21, 2009
Phyllis TIckle and twittering
well, I've entered the twittering world while covering Phyllis Tickle's Great Emergence conference at Seabury. Great group (130 today) despite terrible weather. talking about mixed economy churches--traditional and a branch that is emergence or alternative worship. Have to be careful as it won't work in the same worship space...but it can be done....check out #ticklesw on twitter to follow
Labels:
Great Emergence,
mission,
Phyllis Tickle,
Seabury,
twitter
Friday, February 20, 2009
twittering Phyllis TIckle at Sebury
we had the graduate session this morning, but we're currently in the 1st session of Phyllis Tickle's great emergence conference. Great crowd. all sessions will be posted online in the next few days! to follow on twitter enter #ticklesw
Labels:
Great Emergence,
Phyllis Tickle,
Seabury,
twitter
Friday, January 9, 2009
Phyllis Tickle talks about Seabury
In this brief video, I'm interviewing Phyllis Tickle, author of The Great Emergence, at the Great Emergence Conference in Memphis, TN December 4-6th, 2008. She speaks about this moment in time and Seabury's exciting role in theological education.
Thursday, January 8, 2009
bird by bird
While many of our students are writing their GOEs (General Ordination Exams), I am writing my first blog…and at the moment, I can’t decide which is worse. The angst of taking the GOE’s is a clear memory from 12 years ago, and I certainly don’t envy all those Episcopal ordination candidates who are on day 4 out of 4. At the same time, once GOE’s are over, they are over, which is a very good thing and truly something to celebrate. On the other hand, crafting my first blog is merely a beginning, which implies the necessity of returning to the writing tablet (so to speak) early and often (a bit like Chicago politics perhaps?). I confess (another reminder of the turning/returning necessary in life) that this reality has prompted me to procrastinate on the task at hand for some weeks now. At some point, however, you just have to begin doing it, ‘bird by bird,’ as Anne Lamott said in her delightful book of the same name. And so today is the day.
The impetus to blog in the first place is emerging out of the transformative work we are doing at Seabury-Western Theological Seminary. Having done the very difficult work this spring of deciding to sunset, over the next two years, one of our signature programs, the residential Master of Divinity, we are engaged in the creative work of shaping a new future in theological education. That future is informed in no small part by the work of Phyllis Tickle and others around the Great Emergence that this time in history is a hinge moment, a time of monumental shifts that are political, social, religious, economic, and cultural, affecting all of us whether we're aware of the larger movement or not. Some characteristics of this brave new world include a deep hunger for learning balanced with a profound respect for and integration of the heart, the belief that truth is discovered in community, through conversation and the integration of many voices rather than passed down through a hierarchy and also a deeply incarnational understanding that belonging and community holds more value than believing certain things and behaving in certain ways. Traditional seminary structures were designed in a different age and time, responding to very different needs than we experience today. One might say they were created to hold at bay the reality of the Great Emergence. That doesn't mean there isn't great value in the traditional seminary experience, and yet there is also a great deal to be gained by freeing ourselves of the 'givens' and finding new ways to live faithfully God's call to us. As a result, we at Seabury are opening ourselves to a new way of being present in the world and the church. We are working together with others to meet the deep hunger for the creative, beautiful, unending narrative of God's love for us.
My desire to blog, as it turns out, stems not from the conviction that I have much to say that is worth hearing but that forging our new path isn't possible without the participation of others. The Seabury Blog provides a more fluid and real time way to invite the voices of others interested in the questions of theological education in the Great Emergence. I am eager to join together with others who are asking questions and exploring new ways of being faithful, to build together effective ways of meeting the vast needs. I will be posting more about the ongoing work we are doing and always invite the dialogue with the larger community to help shape and form where we going and how we journey.
I dedicate this opening blog to all those finishing their exams (hooray!) today, and to the creative work engaging us all.....bird by bird.
The impetus to blog in the first place is emerging out of the transformative work we are doing at Seabury-Western Theological Seminary. Having done the very difficult work this spring of deciding to sunset, over the next two years, one of our signature programs, the residential Master of Divinity, we are engaged in the creative work of shaping a new future in theological education. That future is informed in no small part by the work of Phyllis Tickle and others around the Great Emergence that this time in history is a hinge moment, a time of monumental shifts that are political, social, religious, economic, and cultural, affecting all of us whether we're aware of the larger movement or not. Some characteristics of this brave new world include a deep hunger for learning balanced with a profound respect for and integration of the heart, the belief that truth is discovered in community, through conversation and the integration of many voices rather than passed down through a hierarchy and also a deeply incarnational understanding that belonging and community holds more value than believing certain things and behaving in certain ways. Traditional seminary structures were designed in a different age and time, responding to very different needs than we experience today. One might say they were created to hold at bay the reality of the Great Emergence. That doesn't mean there isn't great value in the traditional seminary experience, and yet there is also a great deal to be gained by freeing ourselves of the 'givens' and finding new ways to live faithfully God's call to us. As a result, we at Seabury are opening ourselves to a new way of being present in the world and the church. We are working together with others to meet the deep hunger for the creative, beautiful, unending narrative of God's love for us.
My desire to blog, as it turns out, stems not from the conviction that I have much to say that is worth hearing but that forging our new path isn't possible without the participation of others. The Seabury Blog provides a more fluid and real time way to invite the voices of others interested in the questions of theological education in the Great Emergence. I am eager to join together with others who are asking questions and exploring new ways of being faithful, to build together effective ways of meeting the vast needs. I will be posting more about the ongoing work we are doing and always invite the dialogue with the larger community to help shape and form where we going and how we journey.
I dedicate this opening blog to all those finishing their exams (hooray!) today, and to the creative work engaging us all.....bird by bird.
Labels:
Anne Lamott,
Bird by Bird,
GOE's,
Great Emergence,
Phyllis Tickle,
Seabury
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