BSM: Seminary Immersion Program
My yearlong internship in Scotland was fantastic experience for preparation for ministry, as was my summer-long internship at Decatur Presbyterian Church. That said, I think an internship at Broad Street Ministry might be even cooler.
Located in Philadelphia, BSM is doing some really great things in the heart of the city with worship, homelessness, community life, urban living, basically that whole follower of Christ thing. Not only that, I’ve got a good friend on staff. So if you’re in seminary you should definitely check out their internship program.
As Adam notes, it’s called, a Seminarian Immersion Program. If you’re looking for something to really impact your life during seminary, this program would be just the thing. If you want to read the flyer, you can download it here, or check out their website for more detailed information. I love this description for what could happen during this immersion experience:
The formation that will occur during this experience will be unique for each participant, but will also bear the unique marks of the contexts which fuel it: an inclination toward collaboration, a taste for risk-taking, openness toward the other, and a holy impatience for the realization of the Kingdom of God. BSM House Alumni/ae will be unleashed with a sense for what is possible within local churches, and with skills and networks that will help them translate dreams into first steps once they graduate from seminary.
If you are looking for an experience that will challenge you in new ways, and allow you to be a part of an amazing community, I’d really look into the Seminarian Immersion Program at Broad Street Ministry.
Note: Jan 2, 2009 application deadline.
Atlanta Half Marathon
BEFORE
DURING:
AFTER:
Well, I did it. I used to hate running and now, em, I can at least say I didn’t hate running a 13.1 mile race. I’d rather you call me a “jogger,” though. It’s still a bit of a chore, but it’s one that I really, almost, very close to enjoy, and almost enjoy plenty.
I thought the Atlanta Half Marathon on Thanksgiving Day was fairly well organized, but not exactly the most exciting course in the world–can you say, STRAIGHT LINE–but there were some chilly and cheerful crowds shouting support along the way. That said, there was a great spirit in the air and running with 11,000+ others is really fun. If you’re trying to get in shape, I really recommend signing up for a race and using the race day as a goal. I never would have run 13 miles by myself, but having that race date on the calendar kept me motivated and exciting. I think the half marathon distance is a really good one in that it’s still an accomplishment if you do it, but it’s also a fun and reachable distance for those of us who aren’t natural runners. Actually, “getting in shape” is one way to put it, but I used the training more as a “getting in touch with my body” exercise. It’s amazing how training for a race helped me become more attune to my body, muscles, diet, heart rate, etc.
Don’t know what’s in the near future for my jogging exploits. I think I’ll take it easy over the next few weeks, but definitely try not to completely lose my training. Who knows, ING Georgia Half Marathon come spring?
thanks to Stephanie Berghaeuser for the turtle image
Suicide and Pastoral Care
Last week I mentioned our discussion of suicidality in my introduction to pastoral care course. A curious commenter, Joe Stewart to be exact, asked for some specifics. Borrowing heavily from a class handout, here they are:
Overall Notes and Helps:
- Main take away: If you suspect that someone is thinking of suicide, ASK. Don’t be afraid that your question will give the person the idea. Usually they are relieved to be asked.
- Don’t panic.
- Don’t promise anything that you do not want or cannot deliver.
- Prevent isolation.
- Follow-up is important. Call them back the next day, continue to helpthem workout some of the problems presented.
- Listen, listen, listen.
Clues to Suicidal Intention:
Verbal: “I just wanted to say goodbye.” “I’ve had it, I can’t stand it any more.” “I won’t be around much longer for you…”
Behavioral: The clearest behavioral clue is a “practice run” – a prior attempt of whatever seriousness. Putting affairs in order. Giving away prized possessions.
Situational: Just learned about a terminal diagnosis. Recent traumatic loss. Extreme pressure.
Syndromatic: Depressed. Disoriented. Defiant. Dependent-dissatisfied.
Role Play we did in class:
We then broke up into small groups and carried out a role play using a script about like this…
Helpee: Express pain and despair
Pastor: Mirror and probe
It sounds like you’re feeing very ___ lately
Does it every get so bad that you feel like hurting yourself?
Helpee: Acknowledge such feelings
Pastor: Validate and explore risk
I’m glad you feel you can share that with me.
Can you tell me more about those feelings/thoughts….Do you have a particular way in mind that you would do it?
P: Have you felt this way before?
P: How close are you, do you think, to carrying out a plan? Do you have the pills/gun/knife, etc?
P: Concern + we need to get support + contract
I’m very concerned about the pain you are in, and that you have a pretty firm idea about how you might end your life. It sounds like we need to get some support for you. I would like us to work together to find you the help that you need. I would really like you to make a promise/commitment to me that you won’t act on your plan to hurt yourself until we can get you connected with a good counselor today. Are you willing to do that?
P: I would like you to put that in writing for me. Here, would you write a promise on paper that you will not hurt yourself, and sign it, so we know this is a solemn promise?
So, Joe, that was our main takeaway and practice. Your original question wondered to what extend our response might be theological or biblical. Well, honestly, we discussed that very little. Basically, going down that road might be very dangerous and it sort of gets away from the issue at hand. That’s not to say there aren’t biblical/theological ideas that help with suicide considerers, but as lowly pastors with very basic pastoral care training, there’s definitely people more qualified to delve into such questions. We’re about connecting, and seeing the signals, and having that initial conversation with the contract.
Thoughts?
If you or someone you know is considering suicide, seek help now: SAVE or the National Suicide Prevention Hotline.
Paperback Dreams
Megan and I went to a showing of Paperback Dreams: An Ode to Independent Bookstores last night at Decatur’s PushPush Theater. A panel discussion followed with the maker of the film and several owners of local independent bookstores (including: OutWrite Bookstore, Little Shop of Stories, Blue Elephant, and A Cappella Books).
The film, which will likely be showing on a public broadcasting station near you in the future, was quite good. It told the story of the plight of two independent bookstores in California and doing so brought many questions concerning local economies and independent merchants.
We’re spoiled in Decatur that when we think of going to buy something other than groceries, or going out to eat, what springs first to mind are primarily indie stores. Decatur’s just like that. But it won’t stay that way unless residents continue and improve their support.
Bookstores, especially, take a huge amount of startup money and run very close returns. One of the scenes that will stick with me from the film is the hundreds of “faithful customers” who showed up for the indie book stores closing. They were heartbroken and said things like, “I love this store, I buy all my books here.” But a survey found that under 30% of their book purchases were actually from the indie store–and these are some huge stores with enormous stocks.
The forum brought up a few interesting marketing ideas that book stores are considering, but at the end of the day this phrase sums it up: put your money where you house is.
A trailer for the movie:
Review: "The Omnivore's Dilemma" by Michael Pollan
Rare is the book that educates, enthralls, convicts, and changes the reader as does The Omnivore’s Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals by Michael Pollan [The Penguin Press, 2006, 450 pp.] Put simply: it’s a darn good book. To simplify Pollan’s subject, however, is to disregard his entire project: delving into the utter complexity of our relationship with food.
In three main sections, Pollan, now a journalism professor, tells the story behind four particular meals he eats. In order, these meals are a McDonald’s fast-food dinner consumed (in American style) while driving a convertible down the highway, an “organic” home-cooked meal supplied by Whole Foods, an uber-local meal made up of ingredients from a remarkably sustainable farm in Virginia, and a meal consisting almost entirely of foraged or hunted foods gathered near Pollan’s house in northern California. However, the descriptions of the meals themselves, though nice enough, are not the meat of the book. Instead, it is the backstory, the fascinating truths of the food systems that provide these meals, that is the book’s greatest strength. As Pollan puts it early on, the question of “What should we eat” cannot be addressed without also asking, “What am I eating?” and “Where in the world does it come from?” In 450 pages, Pollan begins an answer.
We could all guess the McDonald’s meal is rather unhealthy and totally unsustainable, but what I didn’t know before reading The Omnivore’s Dilemma is to what extent these products–and our food systems in general–are based on corn. Indeed, of the McDonald’s meal Pollan posits, “if you include the corn in the gas tank…the amount of corn that went into producing our movable fast-food feast would easily have overflowed the car’s truck, spilling a trail of golden kernels on the blacktop behind us.” The book is built upon Pollan’s brilliant description of the industrial nature of America’s food system, almost all of which is predicated on cheap ubiquitous inedible corn.
As fascinating as the discussion of corn truly was–did you know that 60% of our corn stock goes to feeding livestock, that a typical family farm can feed the equivalent of 129 people, that a typical box of breakfast cereal is four cents of commodity corn processed and sold for four dollars–even more interesting is Pollan’s description of the rise of the organic movement originally intended to supply Americans with local, healthy, sustainable products but which now, largely, has been co-opted by the American industrial empire. Tracing some organic Whole Foods products back to their source and interviewing the organic farmers–“organic” at least, according to the USDA–Pollan describes the possible health benefits of some organic foods with the broader question of sustainability and scale in mind. Pollan does well to carry out this daunting task with an informative rather than preachy tone. He comes across as a storyteller, a relayer of complicated and daunting facts, who largely lets the reader judge the best response to his work. As the title suggests, how to proceed morally, ethically, is a dilemma, one which he describes rather than prescribes.
Another section of the book “Pastoral: Grass” consists, in large part, of a description of how grasses are used (or not used) in farming. Specifically, Pollan recounts in engrossing detail, his week-long visit to Polyface Farm, a remarkably sustainable farm in Virginia. Though the farm produces a significant amount of produce (chicken, beef, eggs, rabbits, etc.) Farmer Joel a self-described “Christian-conservative-libertarian-environmentalist-lunatic,” primarily understands himself as a “grass farmer” since grass–its diversity and health–is the key to his sustainable farm. Alternating between riffs on Polyface’s history, the complexity of grass, and the how-to of sustainable farming, Pollan closes the section with comments from Farmer Joel’s loyal customers, some of whom drive for hours to purchase the “chicken that tastes more like chicken” from a farmer they know and trust. Pollan even gets to work on a mini chicken processing assembly line beside Farmer Joel, his trusty interns, and a few helpful neighbors. The journal of Pollan’s week at Polyface would have been enough to make the book a fascinating read, but how he subsequently describes the larger questions of sustainability, local agriculture, and “the non bar-code people” makes his time at the farm a fruitful field-trip indeed.
Finally, in “Pastoral: The Forest” Pollan squeezes in ruminations on the ethics of vegetarianism, vegan lifestyle, several stories of hunting and foraging expeditions, and a detailed description of a gourmet and almost completely foraged meal. This last supper with characters from Pollan’s northern California foraging pursuits is noteworthy, perhaps, but a slightly disappointing end for such a riveting read. Pollan is so careful not to instruct the reader how to eat that he can become overly discursive about his four meals. This is the book’s conceit, I suppose, one that leaves me questioning, but which is perhaps exactly as Pollan’s hopes.
Pollan is so careful–perhaps, too careful–to invite the reader to process the omnivore’s dilemma oneself. I would have welcomed an occasional barb at the industrial food industry or lapsed organic hippies or even a faint suggestion of Pollan’s view of an ethical way forward. That said, one cannot truly invest in the process of reading The Omnivore’s Dilemma without beginning to mull over the bitter dilemma oneself. And maybe this is Pollan’s goal. As Pollan quotes Wendell Berry, “We are what we eat eats.” This realization raises more questions than it answers, but they are worthwhile questions on which to chew.
The Case of the Fibbing Preacher: My Response
See the case study in the previous post, or click here. Again, image credit to coscurro.
Sarah, I’m grateful you called and appreciate that you’re willing to talk over such ethical quandaries with me. Much of what I am about to say is informed by an excellent article by Tom Long in last year’s Christian Century. “Stolen Goods: Tempted to Plagiarize” addresses just the type of question you’re asking so I’ve pulled it out of my file to help us both out [Thomas G. Long, “Stolen goods: Tempted to plagiarize,” The Christian Century Magazine, Ap 17, 2007.]
I’ve asked myself similar questions many a time in my preaching preparation. Sometimes it’s just darn difficult to know how to introduce a story or illustration, and since preaching is oratory and more murky in its rules, citations, and expectations than formal writing, it’s only natural we preachers ask ourselves–and our friends–these questions. After all, Matthew borrowed from Mark. America’s orator, Martin Luther King Jr. appropriated the line, “I have a dream” from a young woman he heard speaking one day on his travels. Imitation, we hear, is the highest form of flattery. So we must begin the discussion noting these discussions are murky. Or as Long puts it: “the issues surrounding pulpit plagiarism are more complex than they may appear at first glance.”
Overall, I think the fact that you’ve called me at this late hour indicates you’re uncomfortable using the story as your own. Your inner preacher conscience is pipping up. Perhaps what this points to is the implicit agreement in effect during the preaching event–when you stand up there on Sunday morning you do not say, “I wrote this sermon I am about to preach.” Implied, instead, is that it is your work for that particular congregation that particular day (all given, we pray, with the assistance of the Holy Spirit). Implicit also, however, is the fact that you have widely read and prepared for the sermon with numerous sources. Those resources will–should and must–influence your words. Those, at the least, are the implied ground rules.
The Case of the Fibbing Preacher
A question for an ethics response paper this week brought up some great discussions and ethical quandaries regarding sermon preparation, citations, and delivery. Here’s the case. My response will go up in a few hours.
The Case of the Fibbing Preacher
Your friend Sarah is the solo pastor of a 100-member church. It’s Saturday night and after a very busy and difficult week, she’s trying to wrap up her sermon. She calls you at 11:00 p.m. to talk through a dilemma she’s facing. She tells you that a mutual friend (now living in another state) has told her a great story about something that happened to him that would fit perfectly into her sermon. She wants to use the story in the sermon, but for various reasons (including a bit of a punch-line that only works in the first person), the story only works if she tells it as if it happened to her. She asks your advice about what to do.
image by coscurro






