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May 2019 News Perspective Online

Reboot Youth Ministry Initiative

Applications will open May 10 for churches interested in participating in the Reboot Youth Ministry Initiative, a program designed to strengthen congregational ministries with youth through programmatic innovation.

The program originated with a five-year, $1 million grant from Lilly Endowment Inc. to Perkins School of Theology announced in December. Co-directors of the grant are the Bart Patton, Director of Youth and Young Adult Ministry Education, and Dr. Priscilla Pope-Levison, Associate Dean, Office of External Programs.

Reboot will select and resource a cohort of congregations within a 300-mile radius of Dallas without a paid full-time youth worker.  Beginning with the application process opening May 10, an initial cohort of 18 congregations—the “Starter Cohort”—will be selected to undergo a discovery process to determine the viability of ministries with youth in their communities and will be introduced to current innovation models for youth ministries.  From this cohort, 12 congregations will be selected as the “Innovation Cohort” to apply for resources provided by the grant to build and sustain an innovative model for congregational ministry with youth.

The final objective is to share the findings, including processes, youth ministry models and stories derived from the cohort congregations and other project participants through public venues including online and print resources, the Perkins School of Youth Ministry, and a Finale Innovation Lab Symposium.

According to Patton, the project’s co-director, the rapidly changing face of youth ministry in both rural and urban congregations was the impetus for this project.

“Youth ministry is at a significant juncture right now,” said the veteran of more than two decades as a youth worker.  “It’s our hope that this new endeavor will provide useful resources to congregations as they navigate ministry with adolescents in their communities.”

Shifting the focus from a full-time paid youth worker to a more comprehensive model in which the entire congregation sees itself as the center of ministry with youth is the key to this innovative project, according to Dr. Pope-Levison.

“The financial and personnel resources that this grant makes possible will lead the way in rebooting youth ministry from the lone ranger approach of the paid youth worker to centering youth ministry as a congregational initiative and endeavor,” she said.

Applications will be available May 10 through July 10, 2019 at smu.edu/perkins/reboot . To be eligible, churches must be within 300 miles of Dallas, must not have a full-time paid youth minister, and be ready to innovate. Churches of all denominations are eligible.

For more information about the initiative, visit the website at smu.edu/perkins/reboot or contact staff at reboot@smu.edu.

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May 2019 News Perspective Online

Student Spotlight: Fernanda Casar Marfil

Fernanda Casar Marfil lives in Monterrey, Mexico; works full time; and is raising two young children. But none of those factors deterred her from a dream she will see fulfilled his month: earning a degree from Perkins School of Theology.

Fernanda expects to graduate this month from the Spanish-language Th.M. Degree Program, as a member of the first cohort of students receiving the advanced master’s degrees. This nonresidential program is designed especially for experienced full-time pastors or church/academic leaders. The first cohort began in the fall of 2017 and will graduate in May. A second cohort is scheduled to begin in the fall of 2019.

Fernanda’s journey began several years ago at John Wesley Seminary in Monterrey. While taking a course there, she met Hugo Magallanes, associate professor of Christianity and Cultures at Perkins.

“We kept in touch, and when the Spanish-language program was announced, he encouraged me to apply,” she said.

Fernanda’s English is excellent, but the hybrid program proved ideal for her life situation. She’s married, has young children – ages 6 and 4 – and works at a nonprofit after school program for children in a marginalized neighborhood in nearby Pescaria, Nuevo Leon. The two-year, 24-hour hybrid M.Th. program requires her to be onsite just two weeks each semester, for intensive courses held in Dallas and in Latin America in combination with online class contact and mentorship.

Perkins is the only institution in the U.S. offering this type of program, according to Magallanes; the first cohort includes students in Latin America and South America as well as U.S.-based students who prefer to read, study and write in Spanish. The application process is in Spanish, and all the instruction is conducted in Spanish. The program is designed for those who want to enhance the practice of ministry through advanced study of a particular theological or pastoral discipline; undertake scholarly examination of a specific aspect of the Christian religion/traditions or function of Christian ministry; or prepare for more advanced study at the doctoral level.

Fernanda’s favorite Bible verse is Micah 6:8: What does the Lord require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God? That relates to her passion for social justice, specifically with the work of the church within marginalized groups. That’s been a focus of her graduate work; she wrote her thesis on the topic of gender violence.

What’s next after graduation? Fernanda is still contemplating her next move but is considering pursuing a Ph.D.

“I would like to do something that combines academic work and work in the field, so that I can always be in touch with the people who are struggling,” she said.

Fernanda grew up in the church, attending since age 10, and has always had a sensitivity to the needs of others.

“That’s something God put in me,” she said. “That led me to be in contact with people in need, like the homeless and migrants. They show me another part of the Christian life – and another face of Jesus. And it gives me a sense of purpose.”

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Faculty May 2019 News Perspective Online

Faculty Profile: Jaime Clark-Soles

Walk by Jaime Clark-Soles’ office, and you might overhear her on the phone, saying something like, “Sure, I’ll do Evil.”

That’s because she’s often asked to tackle the topic of evil at panel discussions and other gatherings. To many students on campus, she’s best known as the professor who teaches the course “Evil, Suffering, Death and the Afterlife.”

But as professor of New Testament and Altshuler Distinguished Teaching Professor at Perkins, Jaime Clark-Soles’ sphere of influence expands well beyond the campus.

Dr. Clark-Soles teaching at the 2019 Perkins Theological School for the Laity. Photo by G. Rogers, SMU Photography.

She averages about three speaking gigs a month, locally, nationally or internationally, ranging from lectures at other universities (a recent one was at Belmont University in Nashville), to leading clergy workshops, to laity education in churches of various denominations. She recently finished recording a series of videos about the Book of Glory, the second half of the gospel of John, as part of a Lenten study at St. Luke’s United Methodist Church in Houston.

“I’m out speaking, teaching and preaching to anybody and everybody interested,” she said. “Have Bible, will travel.”

That fast travel pace may slow just a bit in the coming months as Clark-Soles finishes up two new books: a six-lesson study of 1 Corinthians for Abingdon Ministry Resources, and a “massive” volume on women in the Bible as part of the Interpretation Commentary series, to be published in 2020 by Westminster John Knox Press.

“I know, there are already many books about women in the Bible, so I’ve identified eight ways this particular book will serve the readers,” she said. “One goal is to lift up those women in the Bible who’ve been ignored in the past but are crucial to our tradition.”

Another is to recover women whose person or legacy has been erased from Christian tradition. For example, there’s Junia, a female apostle who appears in Romans 16. Translators added an “s” to change her name to the masculine, Junias.

“She literally got erased from history by an ‘s,’” she said. “I address those translation moves that demote or erase women. They were political moves.”

A third goal entails correcting misinterpretations of women in the Bible, such as the Samaritan woman, Mary Magdalene, and Mary the mother of Jesus.

With help from David E. Schmersal, reference and digital services librarian at the Bridwell Library, Clark-Soles’ book will note where each woman’s story appears in the Lectionary – or not. The goal is to help pastors and teachers connect the material to the Lectionary – but also to understand that many of these stories were omitted from the Lectionary.

She’s also preparing to co-teach a hybrid course this fall at Houston Methodist Hospital as part of Perkins’ Houston-Galveston program. The subject is “Disability, the Bible and Theology.” Portions of the course will be open to chaplains, nurses and other health care professionals.

On top of all this work, she also serves as the founding director of the Baptist House of Studies at Perkins. The “BHS,” as it’s called, provides the opportunity for Baptist students to receive a stellar ecumenical education while being distinctively formed and professionalized in the Baptist tradition. This includes coursework, ordination preparation, internships and connections within the various trajectories of the Baptist family. Clark-Soles, an ordained Baptist minister, is spearheading events such as a campus visit on October 3 by Amanda Tyler, executive director of the Baptist Joint Committee, and hosting the Baptist-affiliated Shurden Lectures at Perkins in the spring of 2020.

Clark-Soles is also an avid traveler but is most proud of the four Global Theological Immersion Trips she has led in recent years with Perkins students and laypeople to Palestine and Israel, which includes a curriculum she calls “Dead Stones and Living Stones.”

“Certainly, we visit meaningful places from the Bible, but we also spend time on current life in the Holy Land, including residing in the West Bank and visiting refugee camps,” she said. “We’re there to learn and hear firsthand about the conflict from both Jewish and Palestinian presenters.”

Teaching Specialties

Johannine literature (Gospel of John; 1-3 John; Revelation); evil, suffering, death and afterlife; New Testament ethics; disability and the Bible; Koine Greek; Israel/Palestine Cultural Immersion trips

Research Interests

Johannine literature; evil, suffering, death and afterlife; Disability Theory and the New Testament; the use and authority of Scripture; women in the Bible; gender and the Bible

Favorite Bible Verse

John 10:10 – I came that they might have life and have it abundantly. “That’s how I decide if something is Christian or not. Does it promote life for all of God’s creation? Or does it not?”

Book on Her Nightstand

The Anatomy of Peace – Resolving the Heart of Conflict by The Arbinger Institute

Fantasy Dinner Party

“I’d invite some of the people I’ve been studying and writing about all my life: Mary Magdalene, Mary, Mother of Jesus, the Samaritan Woman, Paul and Jesus. I would really love to sit around a table and just ask them to tell me what life was really like for them. I’d ask, ‘What made you laugh?’ You have to imagine they had some kind of joy.”

Pets

A rescue dog named Connor. “We adopted him thinking he’d swim with my son and run with me,” she said. “He doesn’t do either. He has taught us a lot about the fact that everyone comes with a backstory that shapes them and they are not here to be what we want them to be. Luckily, he has accepted us as we are as well, with enthusiasm. He’s been a learning experience in the meaning of love.”

Hobbies

Running, racquetball, paddleboard, biking, lifting weights. “I like to be physically active,” she said.

Favorite Travel Destination

“Italy. I am a military brat and went to high school there. It feels like a home base. And the food can’t be beat!”

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May 2019 News Perspective Online

Perkins’ Black Seminarians Host Seven Last Words

Perkins’ Black Seminarians Association hosted the third annual Seven Last Words service on Good Friday, April 19, at Salem Institutional Baptist Church in South Dallas.  Following an African-American tradition, the Good Friday worship was woven around the last utterances of Christ before his death on the cross. Many students, faculty and staff from Perkins were in attendance as well as members of the community.

Seven preachers – all Perkins students or recent alumni – each offered a seven-minute sermon on each of the Seven Last Words, concluding with a message from the Rev. Todd Atkins (’07 M.T.S.), a Perkins alum and senior pastor of Salem Institutional Baptist.

“In 2016, a few seminarians believed that it was important for black seminarians, who have been called to preach, to be given the opportunity to preach,” said the Rev. Bryant Phelps (D. Min. ’17), pastor of Church of the Disciple in DeSoto. “We figured that if no one was going to invite us into their pulpits, we were going to make a pulpit all by ourselves.”

Phelps helped initiate the event in 2017 as an officer of the BSA while at Perkins.

“And, here we are three years later, still at it,” said Phelps. “Amen!”

The service included somber moments as well as elements are rooted in the “homegoing experience” – the celebratory, sometimes revival-like funeral tradition of the African-American church. Musical groups and praise dancers from St. Luke’s “Community” United Methodist Church participated as well.

This year’s worship celebration was coordinated by Christian S. Watkins (MDiv, ‘19), 2018-19 BSA President, assisted by LaTasha Roberts (MDiv, ‘20) and Justin Carter (MDiv, ’19.) The inaugural Seven Last Words service in 2017 took place at St. Luke “Community” UMC, and the second at Hamilton Park UMC in Dallas in 2018.  However, this year’s location at Salem Institutional Baptist was chosen “to highlight the fact that the south of Dallas needs attention,” Watkins said. “The venue change was strategic, because of the need for greater ecumenical support by our black non-Methodist seminarians and the recent establishment of Perkins’ Baptist House of Study.”

Worshippers responded to each of the seven preachers enthusiastically and with words of encouragement. The program featured a lively sermon by the Rev. Joyce Brooks (’18 M.Div., and ’20 D.Min. candidate), senior pastor of St. Paul AME Church in Beaumont, Texas, who preached on Jesus’ words to the criminal on an adjacent cross, in Luke 23:43: “Truly, I say to you, today you will be with me in paradise.”

“Even when Jesus was nailed on the cross, God was still in control,” she said. “If we as a crucified people would come together with one kingdom focus, then perhaps we will see salvation today … in the here and now and not just in the great by-and-by.”

The Rev. Enid Henderson, an expected 2019 M.Div. graduate and executive pastor of Jones Memorial UMC in Houston, reflected on Jesus’ words in Matthew 27:46: “My God, My God, why have you forsaken me?”

“At noon, darkness came over the whole land,” she said. “For three hours, darkness filled the sky. For three hours of suffering and darkness … the crowd owned the conversation. They instigated the infliction of pain.”

But during those same hours of suffering and darkness, she said, “The light of the world consumed darkness so you and I could live in the light. Perfection consumed all the imperfections of humanity.”

Others preaching during the service included the Rev. Lisa Bozeman, an expected 2019 M.Div. graduate and an intern at Hamilton Park UMC; Justin Carter, an expected 2019 M.Div. graduate and intern at Light of the World Church of Christ; the Rev. Sharon Larkin, a D.Min. candidate, expected graduation 2020, and pastor of administration at St. Luke “Community” UMC; the Rev. Dr. Ervin D. Seamster, Jr. (D.Min.), senior pastor at Light of the World Church of Christ; and the Rev. Todd Atkins.

Dean Craig Hill spoke briefly to worshippers at the close of the service.

“What a joy,” said Dean Craig Hill. “It makes everything worthwhile to watch God raise up new people to minister the word. Thanks be to God.”

Watch a video of the service here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0P5PUH8LTE0

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May 2019 News Perspective Online

Two Possible Pathways

While speaking at Perkins Theological School for the Laity in late March, Adam Hamilton saw “two possible pathways” for centrists and progressives following the special General Conference in February. In one, church members say, “This is our church and we’re not giving it up and we’re going to resist and we’re going to disobey the Discipline.” The other means “creating two new Methodisms out of one existing United Methodism.” Read the perspective from Hamilton and others on the church’s future in this UMNS story.

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May 2019 News Perspective Online

Student Update

Congratulations to Cori Clevenger (M.Div., 2020.) Her paper, “John Wesley Hardin: Preacher’s Kid and Convicted Killer,” was selected as the recipient of the Walter Vernon Essay Award for 2019. As winner, Clevenger received a $250 prize and the opportunity to present a summary of the paper to the Annual Meeting of the Texas United Methodist Historical Society. The meeting was held in April at the Central Texas Archives Center in Arlington, at the invitation of the Central Texas Archives and History Commission in Ft. Worth and Arlington.

Hardin (1853-1895) was an American Old West outlaw, gunfighter, and controversial folk icon. The son of a Methodist preacher, Hardin got into trouble with the law from an early age. He killed his first man at age 14, he claimed in self-defense. Pursued by lawmen for most of his life, he was sentenced in 1877 at age 24 to 25 years in prison for murder. When he was sentenced, Hardin claimed to have killed 42 men; however, he was well known for wildly exaggerating or completely making up stories about his life.  Within a year of his release in 1894, Hardin was killed by John Selman in an El Paso saloon.

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May 2019 News Perspective Online

Alumni/ae Update

Mark W. Stamm, Professor of Christian Worship at Perkins, was recently interviewed for the podcast Practicing the Presence, a production of Arapaho United Methodist Church in Dallas and hosted by the Rev. Blair Thompson-White (D. Min. 2018, M.Div. 2012), Senior Pastor. The topic was “Bumping Up Against Grace,” about John Wesley’s experience of having his heart “strangely warmed” and the practices that we can use in our daily lives to get close to God. To listen to the podcast, click here.

 

Past Alumni/ae Updates

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April 2019 News Perspective Online

A Message from Dean Hill

Naturally, all of us closely associated with Perkins regard our school as a dynamic and vital partner with the church. Nevertheless, it is important from time to time to have the value of one’s work assessed by an impartial source. For that reason, last year all 13 United Methodist schools of theology commissioned a detailed study by Dr. Daniel O. Aleshire, who until recently served as the Executive Director of The Association of Theological Schools. (Dr. Aleshire worked for ATS for 27 years and is the preeminent authority on theological education in America.)

The new study comes at a challenging time for seminaries.  One issue it addressed concerns the fact that there are 13 United Methodist seminaries in the U.S., including Perkins.

Given widespread decline in enrollment (though Perkins itself has bucked this trend in recent years) and denominational discord, is that number justifiable? The results suggest that each of the U.M. theological schools plays a crucial role in developing Wesleyan church leaders – including the majority of United Methodist ordination candidates. The long-term picture, however, is less clear.

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April 2019 News Perspective Online

Office of Development

April is always a bittersweet month because we will soon say goodbye to students who will be graduating in May.

Our faculty and staff have formed bonds with these students, and are excited that many will be taking positions of leadership in the Church and in other settings.  We are confident that, with their natural gifts and abilities, and with the education they have received at Perkins, they will be successful in their lives of ministry.

Most of these graduates, along with the rest of the student body, could not have pursued their studies if they had not received significant financial help during their time at Perkins.  They will not be going out into high-paying jobs—they have been called to serve and empowered to lead, but have been not been given any assurance of financial independence!

Our many donor friends have been influential in helping them complete their degrees.  Each year, we receive more than $2.5 million from faithful donors so that Perkins’ operational needs are met, and scholarships can be awarded to worthy and needy students.

Because our enrollment is expanding, and we will have a larger student body next year, we will have even more demand for our scholarship dollars.  We need your help.

We are asking every friend of Perkins to make a contribution to the important ongoing work of our School of Theology.

To be a part, click here and select an area of your interest in the drop down menu.  If you don’t know which fund to select, let me suggest either the “SMU Fund for Perkins,” the Dean’s discretionary fund, or “Perkins School Student Financial Aid.”  Those two funds are the first two listed in the drop-down menu.

If you would rather give by check, make it out to “SMU” and on the notation line list the “SMU Fund for Perkins” or “Student Financial Aid.”  Send the check to me and I will make sure it gets into the right account.

John A. Martin
Perkins Development
PO Box 750133
Dallas, TX 75275-0133

As always, you can email (johnma@smu.edu) or call (214-768-2026).  Thank you for your generosity.

John A. Martin
Director of Development
Perkins School of Theology

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April 2019 News Perspective Online

MAST Program Launched at Perkins

Since its founding, Perkins School of Theology has prepared students for the pulpit.  Now, a new program is helping Perkins students to prepare to speak through alternative “pulpits” – books, blogs, film, music and other media.

The Minister-Author-Scholar-Teacher (MAST) Program, launched as a pilot venture in the fall of 2018, is a two-year program that offers resources and training to a select cohort of master’s level students at Perkins interested in writing or creating other media for the church and academy.

The inaugural “class” drew students with interests in film, music, blogging and Sunday School curriculum, as well as more academic writing, according to Ted A. Campbell, a Perkins faculty member and director of the MAST program.

“Most are students who want to be pastors but are also interested in creating material for a popular audience – the laypeople in the church,” he said. “They tend to be younger students who are media savvy and tech savvy. It’s a really interesting group.”

The group gathers for four events per semester.  In the second year, students will participate in a capstone course, with the goal of creating and submitting a publishable work, such as a book, to a publisher or media outlet.  The program has garnered endorsements from prominent authors, including the Rev. Adam Hamilton, Bishop Robert Schnase, Dr. Amy Oden and the Rev. Dr. Michael Waters. (See endorsements after article.)

February’s class featured Rachel Ridge, a popular author who writes about faith for a lay audience. Her most recent book, Walking with Henry: Big Lessons from a Little Donkey on Faith, Friendship, and Finding Your Path, was published in March 2019 by Tyndale.  Ridge shared her story about how, at a point when her family was struggling, they adopted a homeless donkey. That adventure led to her first book and the launch of her writing career.

After hearing Ridge speak, MAST participant Emily Clark (M.A.M., 2020) was inspired to begin posting daily on her blog, Our Beautiful, Messy Lives.

“I love to write; the MAST program is helping me to follow that interest and really develop it,” she said. “It’s wonderful to have a group of like-minded people – I call it a community of creative creators. They are a source of motivation and momentum.”

Campbell says the project is giving students practical pointers on marketing and disseminating their work, such as guidance on submitting a book proposal.

“One of the first questions an author must answer is ‘Who will read your book?’” Campbell said.  “And the wrong answer is, ‘Everybody.’ It’s challenging but it’s essential for an author to define his or her readership. It’s helping students with this interest to think in this way.”

“I immediately jumped at the chance for training and networking with other people who were interested in doing creative, well-researched Christian work made for a wide audience of people,” said Adam Lubbers, an M.Div. student in the MAST program.  “I am currently a youth director and I teach every week, primarily with lessons I write. I preach sermons to a congregation sometimes, and I enjoy watching TV shows, movies, and playing video games, and thinking about all of them theologically.”

Lubbers added that he’s interested in using popular culture to make complex theological themes accessible to a wider audience.

“Popular culture is something I utilize often whenever I teach teenagers and give sermons, and my future creative work will probably focus on this,” he said.

Future events will include gatherings with speakers like Adam Hamilton, a United Methodist pastor and bestselling author; an SMU novelist who writes from a secular perspective; and the Rev. Arthur Jones, a pastor at St. Andrew United Methodist Church in Plano, Texas, who expresses key sermon themes across a variety of media – podcasts, blogs, video and more – in a coordinated approach.

Future events will include speakers like the Rev. Arthur Jones, a pastor at St. Andrew United Methodist in Plano, Texas, who expresses key sermon themes across a variety of media — podcasts, blogs, video and more — in a coordinated approach; and an SMU novelist who writes from a secular perspective. The Rev. Adam Hamilton, a United Methodist pastor and bestselling author, spoke to the MAST students while on campus on March 28.

“I’m not aware of other theological schools undertaking such a program,” said Dean Craig C. Hill, who helped spearhead the MAST program.  “This is part of our vision of Perkins as ‘an academy for the whole church in the whole world.’  We need to encourage and educate the next generation of pastor/scholars who will produce books, film, and other media that are accessible to a popular audience but also theologically informed.”

In recent decades, it has been primarily more conservative churches that have been innovative in producing materials accessible to a wide audience, such as the wildly popular Left Behind fiction series. But these don’t necessarily reflect mainstream Christian scholarship. The Left Behind books, for example, are based on a very specific interpretation of apocalyptic biblical literature that has its origins in the 19th century. Campbell and Hill hope the MAST program will help to launch a new wave of similarly accessible materials that are grounded in the teachings of the historic mainline Protestant churches.

“Dean Hill has been thinking a long time about the need for Christian leaders to engage popular readership and viewership,” said Campbell. “The MAST program is a significant step in that direction.”

 

Application Information

A second cohort of students will begin the MAST program in the fall of 2019. Anyone interested should contact Ted A. Campbell at tedc@smu.edu.

Students who wish to be considered for the program should be accepted simultaneously into a Perkins master’s degree program and must have a 3.5 cumulative GPA (or equivalent) from their undergraduate degree-granting institution. In addition, they should submit two additional items for review to the Director of the Program: a formal letter of interest explaining the student’s sense of vocation as relates to the production of writing and/or other genres of creative media, and a sample of their creative work (writing or other media) for review.  Participants will be selected by the director of the program in consultation with the MAST program advisory group.

 

Endorsements

These four Perkins alumni, all accomplished authors and pastors, weighed in with their words of endorsement for the new program.

“Perkins’ new MAST program is a gift to pastors who feel called to write and teach, and to authors, scholars and teachers who are called to preach.  Study, shepherding, teaching, preaching and writing are all important elements of my ministry.  Each strengthens the others.  I am a better pastor because I write, and I am a better writer because I am a pastor.  Perkins’ new MAST program is the only program I know aimed at equipping students for this important integrated ministry.  If you feel called to write, to teach and to preach, you must take a serious look at this program.”

– The Rev. Adam Hamilton, bestselling author and senior pastor of Church of the Resurrection in Leawood, Kansas.

 

“As we re-imagine church for the 21st century, the MAST program looks like an exciting move in the right direction, cultivating artists, prophets and poets who enter into the culture creatively, inviting new conversations in new places. We live so much of our lives in virtual villages of one sort or another, it’s critical to offer good news in these gathering spaces through podcasts, videos, blogs and new media.”

– Dr. Amy Oden, professor of early church history and spirituality at St. Paul School of Theology at Oklahoma City University and author of God’s Welcome: Hospitality for a Gospel-Hungry World.

 

“I began to intentionally cultivate the craft of writing while I was a seminary student at Perkins.  Writing is a contemplative experience for me and has become a cornerstone of my ministry.  It’s my way of learning, of engaging in deep conversation, and of offering myself to the church.  I’m delighted to recommend the MAST program to those seeking to multiply their ministry by cultivating their capacity for creative writing and teaching.  MAST provides the community of support, encouragement, and accountability that fosters creativity and courage.”

– Bishop Robert Schnase, writer, pastor, and bishop of the Rio Texas Annual Conference.

 

“Our world has long benefited from prodigious prophets who have used their pen to propel people to pursue new plateaus for faithful service to God and God’s creation. I am grateful for the intentionality of the MAST program to help raise up a new generation of prodigious prophets who will use their pens and cursors to do the same.”

-The Rev. Dr. Michael W. Waters, author and founding pastor of Joy Tabernacle African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) Church in Dallas, Texas.