We had a great weekend: our fall DIG (also known as Sojourn’s Service Weekend) was a success. We headed down to Cape Cod on Friday, played some crazy games, built a campfire, watched the sunrise on the beach, and had many great times. Saturday we came back to Boson and served alongside some of our partner ministries in Dorchester, introducing many of our students to our work in the neighborhoods of the city. Check out some of the pics from the weekend:
Tag: Collegiate Ministry
Millenials, Busyness, and Other Readings of the Week
- Spot-on analysis of the mindset of 21st century people (especially students)
- Killing programs: what the church can learn from google, apple, and facebook
- 26 ways to “heart” your pastor
- Donald Miller on “my subplot”
- Guy Chmielski with two great posts of notes from Catalyst: Some Thoughts on Millennials and 5 Stages to Awesome
Campus Ministry and The Great Emergence
I just finished Phyllis Tickle’s newest book, Emergence Christianity, and while I did not find it as compelling as The Great Emergence it did give me a lot to chew on. As she attempts to predict what the future of the church might look like in the West I couldn’t help but be overwhelmed with how important campus ministry is both to the present and the future.
Consider this statement:
“Given the Emergence concern about formal theology and seminaries, and given the declining figures and resources within Protestantism and possibly Roman Catholicism, who will become the Christian philosophers and ethicists among us, who will train them, who will provide for their work as a community of scattered but connected scholars?”
I wish I had the time to elaborate, but as I was reading I said, out loud, Campus Ministry! Not that CM is the answer to everything, but this is, in part, what we have been doing, what we aim to do, and it is role we are well suited to take on if this is how the trends continue to develop.
October
Amazingly we are already in October! Marina is almost 3 weeks old, the Giants are in the playoffs, and students are starting to get ready for the first round of midterms. A couple of ministry notes to start off a new month:
- I am really excited about our Service Weekend (this coming weekend). Essentially, this is our version of a Fall Retreat, but with a twist. We’ll be heading to the Cape Friday night and then back to the city to serve on Saturday.
- Our groups are growing on campus, new students are getting involved and growing in our communities.
- REUNION’s attendance has been stellar to start the Fall, a very encouraging sign.
- I continue to learn how to balance being a dad and not sleeping with college ministry. Every day is an adventure!
Nailed It
Well, we are still on cloud nine because of this. But, the world keeps on turning, and one of the great events of the last couple of days (non-parenting category) was Sojourn’s first leadership community of the new semester. Last spring we introduced the “Golden Hammer” as a way to celebrate one of our teams that “nailed it” during the past month.
SojournBU won the golden hammer for the first time, and I am so proud of them! They’ve done a solid job inviting new people into the community and we are starting to see some good stories come in. Like this:
We held a welcome/intro event during the first week of class…I had a few students leave our set up time to randomly pass out fliers to people nearby. This was a bit of risk, and you can always look and feel stupid doing these kinds things. But they were up for the challenge and a handful of people who received fliers ended up coming to the event. One of the girls who came ended up joining a small group, at which she shared about her desire to connect more deeply with Jesus. She just didn’t know how to do that at BU. So, it was quite fortuitous that she happened to be handed a flier. Now she’s a part of a conversation about Jesus and Acts and the early church at one of our small group gatherings! Very cool…BU hasn’t had a ton of these kinds of stories but because our students are taking risks and making invitations they are going to become a much more regular occurence.
Follow This
I don’t have a ton of time for a reflection piece today, and, it may be a while before I get around to posting here again. The baby is due Friday and we are rooting for earlier!
So, if you would like something to read on a daily basis I would strongly suggest checking out Sojourn’s new “Soul Work” Blog: daily reflections on the Psalms. It’s good stuff!
A Weekend of Awesome
Some pics from two great days: SojournBU students participating in NotForSale’s Abolitionist Walk on Saturday, and then the craziest Free Student Lunch of all time (We jammed close to 100 students in to the office space and it was cozy to say the least). Awesome!
Experience, Women in the Church, Philosophy, and Sweeps
- Guy Chmieleski wrote a great post on 15 things he’s learned in 15 years of campus ministry
- Millennials buy a lot of books!
- Q&A with Scot McKnight on Barna research regarding women’s role, women in the church, women in leadership
- BU prof Stephen Prothero on the difference between Christianity and Ayn Rand’s philosophy
- Oh, and the Giants SWEEP the Dodgers!
Wisdom
Yesterday some from the Globalscope crew posted their favorite quotes from our time with Bob Randolph during Celebration. I thought I’d share them here:
“I’ve learned listen more than talk.”
“Can you live with not being successful in others eyes?”
“You have to live with the ambiguity of not having quick answers to a lot of hard questions.”
“Are you in this for the long haul?”
“You will not be thanked.”
“My God has grown a lot.”
“Wisdom is being able to draw conclusions.”
“Learn to talk well about the things that matter most to you, have them rejected, and stay in the conversation.”
“In our faith, small things often matter a great deal.”
“Pay attention in times of transition.’
“Focus on questions of being and meaning.”
And my favorite: “Has Mark Zuckerburg had more influence on your vocation more than Jesus.”
Wholehearted (A Final Rolling Stones Post)
The third and final installment of a three part series (“Honing Our Chops”) that first appeared at Faith ON Campus:
[I recently finished Life by Keith Richards, lead guitarist for the Rolling Stones. When most people think of the Stones they probably think of Mick Jagger first (no thanks to Keisha and Maroon 5). But Keith has really been the leader, glue, and engine for the band that turns 50 this year. I found a lot of what Keith writes about in Life to speak into my vocation as a Campus Minister. These are my reflections on Keith’s insights.]
“We just wanted to be a great blues band. That’s all we played [the blues], until we actually became it.” from Life, p. 158.
One of the themes that becomes very clear, very quickly, when reading Life by Keith Richards is that the Rolling Stones never set out to be an epic, culture changing rock n’ roll band. They were deeply influenced by the Chicago blues (Muddy Waters, etc), and that is, in many ways, how they still view themselves to this day: a Chicago blues band from London.
Not that they didn’t have ambition. They wanted to be a great band. But they had no idea what they were getting themselves into.
When students show up on campus as freshmen there are some who just want to party, and a few others who are there to get a degree and get on with it, but the majority of students come with significant dreams and aspirations.
They may not say this to the first people they meet at school, but they come wanting, believing, even knowing, that they can, and will, change the world.
But then life happens, disappointments accumulate, frustrations with classes and professors set in, and some of the gleam and shine of college begins to fade.
There is a kind of lostness that many students wander through around the mid-way point of their college experience. Should I stay in this major? Should I transfer schools? Is this really worth all the money and debt?
I believe students wind up in this place for two reasons:
- They lack a specific vision for their life (I want to change the world sounds nice, but it is far too vague to sustain anyone for a long period of time).
- They have been taught to hold back
I picked up Life because, of course, I wanted to hear some incredible stories about the greatest rock band of all time. But I was also interested because this is the 50th anniversary of the band (a band that still includes 3 of the 5 originals and a fourth who has been around for almost 40 years). How do you stay in the game, let alone on top of the game, for that long? 50 years is an impressive marriage.
I think the two big reasons the Stones are celebrating a 50th anniversary are that they had a specific vision (to be the best blues band in London), and they did not hold back.
There are several scenes in the life of Jesus where he lets people in on the secret: this thing is headed to the cross…my mission is to be broken and poured out for you. Almost every time he says this someone tells him no, that’s a bad idea (see John 6 or Matthew 16).
Martin Buber speaks of taking either a “yes” or “no” position to life. Jesus was saying an emphatic yes to his vision, and he was not going to let some “no” position folks hold him back.
Campus ministers must help their students navigate the college experience with wisdom and sagacity. But, hopefully, not at the expense of taking a “yes” position in relation to our students.
Certainly they get plenty of the “no” position from many other sources.
One more Stones story. For the first four years of their existence the Stones were playing a gig or recording a song for all but 2 days of that period. Now certainly working everyday for four years is not healthy. But, here’s the really interesting thing: very little of what they played and produced during this time was original material. Most of their big original work took place in the ten years after this.
It’s almost as if those four years were their university years. And they threw themselves fully into this time: learning songs, learning how to play together, learning how captivate an audience, learning a sound, learning everything they’d need to know later on down the road (when they really did change the world).
A campus minister has the opportunity to guide students to a posture of “yes”. To help students find their “chicago blues” and to throw themselves fully into life.
The chops of wholeheartedness.