Monday, August 31, 2009

It Begins!

I have safely moved to Oregon! I wouldn't say I'm settled in my apartment, but I'm getting there. It feels good to be "home" again, I've missed my friends here a lot.

I started an internship with Sherwood United Methodist Church. They are an awesome group of people and so very brave to take on a student minister. I'll be preaching throughout the year and helping to plan worship, small groups, and whatever else they ask of me. It'll be so nice to work with Kirk again AND to have a chance to experience yet another side of church in action. My first sermon is actually on the 20th, and I'm meeting with our worship team to help plan the service on Wednesday. I love having the worship team meet weekly, it allows us to reflect on what needs changed, what works, and how the church can continue to grow. Plus, if I stick around, I get to listen to singing, which I love.

I start classes very soon. My first six week block of classes at NHTS are Greek and Church History. I'm not going to lie, I'm very nervous about Greek. I've never been awesome at languages. At least I already know the Greek alphabet! See, and everyone said being in a sorority wouldn't be useful.

I'm job hunting, which is a completely depressing process, but I have to just keep plugging away. While it would be nice if life was free, it turns out that's not so much true. It's one of those things that people keep saying will "work out." I'm sure they're right, but it doesn't make me stress less.

Leaving Idaho was hard, I miss my family, friends, and my youth group "kids" a lot, but I am just so ready to get it all started. Even the Greek.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Nuts and Bolts

I get asked about the "stuff" behind becoming a minister a lot, so I thought I'd give a quick overview of what, exactly, I'm doing right now. In the United Methodist Church, we have a long and slightly complicated candidacy process. I'm not the only one who gets to decide if this call is the right one for me, it's up to me, God, and various other people along they way. (But really, mostly God.)

So, anyone who is even thinking they are interested in ministry gets to read a fun little book called "The Christian as Minister" which is a nice overview of the duties, areas, and questions around ministry. Then, at some point, in some order, they write the district superintendent of their little area of the world that they are interested in pursuing candidacy. The DS gets very excited about this new little recruit and assigns a mentor to help guide the process.

Janine is my mentor and she's amazing. She's actually a deacon, which is different than an elder in many very confusing but important ways. (In the Methodist church both deacons AND elders are ordained clergy. The head pastor at a church is almost always going to be an elder.) I am on the "elder track" for now, which means I want to be a pastor in a little country church in the middle of Idaho. Anyway, Janine and I met all summer and talked through an impressive workbook as required by the various boards that require these things. She's an invaluable source of knowledge and wisdom. It is SO helpful to have a mentor, because there are a million questions that I needed help sorting out. I ranged from the major "wait, what am I thinking" to the practical "how much vacation time will I be getting?" In talking through everything that got me to this point and all my ideas for the future, I realized that I am heading in to the right call. She will continue to be my mentor for awhile (well, she'll be my unofficial mentor forever, of course) as I continue through this process.

In about a month, I meet with the District Council on Ministries, who will decide if I can continue on to be a certified candidate in ministry. They aren't actually deciding that in a month, I'm just having a preliminary interview. I also get to take a ridiculously long pysch profile to make sure I'm fit, or something. I'm not entirely clear. Sometime this spring they'll vote officially to make me a certified candidate.

Assuming that goes well, I will continue on with seminary. Once I've graduated, I meet with the Board of Ordained Ministry at the conference level. They ask me fun questions, I write essays, it all sounds very exciting. If I meet with their approval, I am then ordaaaai....

Nope, not fully ordained yet. If I get through all that with flying colors, I become a probationary elder. I will be commissioned to a church somewhere in the conference. I believe probationary ministry is about three years. After that I am finally, really, fully, ordained as an elder in full connection.

Lost yet? I usually am. It seems long and complicated, but it also ensures that the right people are heading to the right directions. And really, just because it is a church doesn't mean it is not a crazy bureaucracy too.