October 8, 2015

Forum on Radical Theological Education

Preacher: Pastor Jin S. Kim, Barbara Holmes, Ched Myers, Michael-Ray Matthews | Series: Forum on Radical Theological Education

There is a lot of concern today about the crisis of theological education. The institutional church is declining in numbers, while the costs of education continue to rise.

At the same time, there has been a groundswell of organizing activity the last few years resisting the intersecting pathologies of our neoliberal imperial society. Black Lives Matter is shining a spotlight on the violence of institutionalized white supremacy, indigenous voices continue to call our attention to the destructive effects of settler colonialism on their people and on Mother Earth, and Occupy Wall Street and debt resistance movements have called out the predatory practices of Wall Street and big banks.

Alternative ways of relating to the earth and one another also continue to spread. Intentional communities have formed as a response to the alienation of American individualism, gift and sharing economies have emerged as alternatives to capitalism’s commidifying market economy of exchange, and small-scale permaculture is spreading as a corrective to the environmental harm of industrial agriculture.

The Spirit of liberation is moving and giving birth to more humane and sustainable forms of community life.

We have an opportunity today, as older professional models of ministry are in question, to rethink theological education from the ground up. How can theological education help us get at the roots of the social and environmental crises facing us today, exorcise the demons of empire from our institutions and bodies, and disciple us—through a deep rootedness in our biblical tradition—into alternative movement communities of resistance, justice and sustainability? How can theological education listen to and follow the liberating and creative winds of the Spirit today, while learning from those witnesses who have gone before us in this work?

We invite you to join us the evening of Oct. 8 at Church of All Nations for a Forum on Radical Theological Education with four leaders working to radicalize the ways Christian leaders are trained. The event is free of charge and will include a question and answer time.

The Panel:

CHED MYERS is an activist theologian, biblical scholar, popular educator, author, organizer and advocate who has for 35 years been challenging and supporting Christians to engage in peace and justice work and radical discipleship. He has been a leading voice in alternative theological education through his work with Word & World and Bartimaeus Cooperative Ministries.

BARBARA HOLMES is the president of United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities, as well as professor of ethics and African American Religious Studies. She is an ordained minister recognized in the Disciples of Christ. Holmes is also a writer and scholar who publishes books about the intersection of ethics, spirituality, mysticism, cosmology, and African American religious culture.

JIN S. KIM is founding pastor of Church of All Nations and most recently founder of Underground Seminary, an alternative form of theological education that focuses on decolonizing Christian leadership. He writes and speaks widely on the ministry of reconciliation in a post-colonial, post-supremacist world.

MICHAEL-RAY MATHEWS is the Director of Clergy Organizing for PICO National Network, a faith-based network of over 1200 congregations engaged in community organizing in over 200 cities in the United States. He leads the Prophetic Voices Initiative, aimed at shaping the movement for racial and economic inclusion in the US, and recently co-led a delegation of clergy at the Vatican to discuss racial justice issues.

2 Comments

Kevin Kot · October 9, 2015 at 9:00 am

Miigwech for the thoughtful discussion.
For myself Pastor Kim’s merging of spirituality and real life living resonates within me.
I’m very grateful for the insights the other speakers give projecting a clear picture of the structure of colonization within the schools and organizations of Christendom.
For me I find God had placed me in colonized living and I didn’t know how much I was colonized, which I think to me is Paul’s wording of being in the world , it’s system. As we become ” born from above” and awaken to our spirituality of who we really are living in this earthly journey, it’s then I learn to become free, within my heart and feelings, as well as mind and spirit, that I’m in the decolonizing process. That is being in the world not of it in christian words.
The teaching of the Eastern door in Ojibwe is about entering into this earthly existence as a gift from the Creator.
The gift and gratefulness is always there even if hardship and colonizing is apart of my journey, because we are returning around the medicine wheel of this journey back to the source of Life.
Pastor Kim’s understanding or foresight realizing there may come a day when the system de frocks him is good in that he truly is being changed and transformed becoming a misfit to the the system which I think the Big Book references as Mystry Babylon. It is , Little by little, that we really understand freedom and living in the Kingdom, that’s what I’m finding for myself.
As for myself I’m finding living as a Anishinaabe person and follower of Jesus there are many areas that are different than Traditional teachings and ways of Anisihinaabe living as well as Many similar. For example playing on the big drum singing worship songs Is a different structure than traditional taught structure to songs. That being honor beats at certain parts of the song, push ups in the song and rounds to the songs.
We do similar but also a freedom in the Spirit as the Spirit moves to add to the songs, which would not be allowed traditionally. We always stress were not traditional neither are we saying traditional songs are wrong we honor the songs. This helps many who only know one way, traditional way of drum songs, to not expect and require the proper protocols associated with the big drum.
So I guess thanks for all the discussion and encourage you all in just allowing the Spirit to tear down and build anew the reign of God which is Life enjoy the journey everything is necessary.
Thanks for listening.
Kevin

Bryan Jon · October 9, 2015 at 1:01 pm

Outstanding presentation by this group last night…I was able to make some life decisions during and after this…blessings to you…

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