Site
Contents

Search

Contact Information

Imagine Indiana Transition Team Information

General Information about the Area Office

Bishop Coyner's Office

Communications

North Indiana Conference Office

South Indiana Conference Office

Appointments

Appointment Process

Death Notices

Prayer Guides
(Courtesy of the NIC Prayer Team)

Area United Methodist
Foundation

Conferences
& Districts

Annual 
Conference 2006

Links

Missions &
Ministries


For resources to assist your congregation in welcoming guests, click here

Seashore District Volunteer Center VIM project -- Completed

Jobs & Events

Local Pastor's School

Course of Study

Site Map

General 
Conference 2004

Hoosier United Methodist  News Archives

Previous Years Annual Conference Coverage

News Releases

Home Page

Hoosier United Methodists together

July/August 2004

Church, schools need to work together to train pastoral leaders

By Kathy L. Gilbert

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UMNS) - In order for the United Methodist Church to survive, the church needs to get intentional about training young people for pastoral and lay leadership, participants at the Institute of Higher Education were told.

"We need to encourage colleges to invite seminarians to their campus to see who we are, to see what it means to be United Methodist."

- Samuel Johnson

A study commissioned by the United Methodist General Board of Higher Education and Ministry, sponsors of the June 13-15 event, indicates that students entering higher education institutions are "more religiously engaged than in recent years, suggesting that a religious revival may be occurring among today's young adults."

"Many students experience a call while in college," said John Ewing Jr., president of United Methodist-related Mount Union College in Alliance, Ohio. "Are we giving them an opportunity to respond to God's call on their lives?"

Ewing was part of a panel discussion on "Tending the Flame," along with the Rev. Samuel Johnson, director of professional education at United Methodist-related Boston University School of Theology, Bishop Timothy W. Whitaker of the Florida Area and the Rev. Dan Morris of First United Methodist Church in Millbrook, Ala. They see the need to forge a stronger partnership between the local church and institutions of higher education.

Johnson said he had his conversion experience under the guidance of a campus minister at church-related DePauw University in Greencastle, Ind. "We need to encourage colleges to invite seminarians to their campus to see who we are, to see what it means to be United Methodist," he said. "The tradition of United Methodist culture is worth holding up and holding on to."

"Our church is in serious trouble if we don't find new pastoral leadership," Ewing said. "Students are finding spiritual fulfillment outside of The United Methodist Church."

Whitaker pointed out that bishops and college presidents have been in conversation for years about ways United Methodist institutions of higher education can support the church. "Often we do not connect in the connection," he said, mentioning a trend among some churches toward "congregationalism" instead of thinking of the church as a connectional body. "We need to get the attention of local church members."

Morris believes that "teaching our young people to love God with their minds" is a way to rekindle the flame. In the United Methodist view of sanctification and going on to perfection, he said, "the natural progression is to educate your mind to the highest level so that you can serve Christ in the world."

Ewing said a church and college partnership could start with the campus minister or chaplain and the pastor of the local church that serves the campus. He suggested bishops and college presidents work together to appoint campus ministers or local pastors with a passion for pastoral leadership to United Methodist-related institutions. "The church has to make a serious attempt to connect young people in colleges with dynamic pastors and campus ministers."

John Wesley charged the church to "education for the common good." As a result, more than 100 colleges were established side-by-side with United Methodist churches. Early in our history, the only way for higher education institutions to survive was from church support," said Ewing. "The opposite is true today. The only way the United Methodist Church is going to survive is if higher education institutions support the church."

Last updated on July 09, 2004


Questions or comments: webmaster@inareaumc.org