440 likes | 678 Views
What is Rostered". Rostered" simply means that every Synod and, therefore, every congregation of the ELCA has access to your name.Rostered" means making yourself available to God's call wherever God has need of you and your gifts.. R E V E R E N D or P A S T O R. DEACONESS. ASSOCIATE
E N D
2. Rostered Ministryin the ELCA
3. What is Rostered Rostered simply means that every Synod and, therefore, every congregation of the ELCA has access to your name.
Rostered means making yourself available to Gods call wherever God has need of you and your gifts.
5. But first . . .
7. Who Me ?!?!
8. What is dee-ak'-on-os ? Often translated as servant but so much more:
an attendant:
a waiter (at table or in other menial duties)
a Christian teacher and pastor (deacon or deaconess)
minister, servant
to be an attendant:
wait upon
Menially / as a host
friend / teacher
to act as a Christian deacon
(ad-) minister (unto)
Serve
use the office of a deacon
9. Every time you . . . Serve a funeral dinner
Prepare a meal for a community luncheon
Add your voice to that of others in worship
Sing in choir
Read lessons
Greet or Usher
Set and clear the Eucharist table
11. Anytime you act as servant or helper or friend . . .
12. So what makes rostered leaders different? What are the requirements?
13. The only things that make rostered leaders different are the rostering, the education, the accountability, and the professional nature of the call. Rostered leaders are paid by a congregation or agency to do what they do.
15. Pastor / Reverend Bachelors Degree
4 years of seminary including a full year of internship in a congregation
Clinical Pastoral Education (CPE chaplaincy)
Rigid academic requirements
Masters of Divinity (MDiv)
16. Associate in Ministry Bachelors Degree
Proof of expertise in some aspect of ministry
Administration (Secretary or Accountant)
Music and the Arts
Education
Service / General Ministries
Parish nursing
Outdoor / Camping ministry
Parish Worker
Counselor / Lay chaplaincy
Seminary and independent study defined in numbers of hours (20) and required classes
600 hours of field work
Certification, no degree
17. Academic Requirements One course in each of the following:
Old Testament (Hebrew Bible)
New Testament
Lutheran Theology & Confessional Writings
Systematic Theology
Lutheran Church History
18. Deaconess Bachelors Degree
Acceptance into a deaconess community
Discernment period at the Motherhouse in Chicago or Valparaiso, IN
Biblical training defined in terms of hours (60+) and required classes
1-year congregational internship
Continuing, annual education through the Motherhouse
19. Diaconal Minister Bachelors Degree
Discernment retreat (2 weeks) in Gettysburg, PA
Seminary training defined in terms of hours (60+) and required classes
700 hours of field work
Masters Degree
20. Academic Requirements One course in each of the following:
Old Testament
New Testament
Church History
Systematic Theology
Ethics
Lutheran Confessions
Church in Society
21. Entrance acceptance into the program
Begin seminary studies
Endorsement approval to continue studies
Internship
Fieldwork
Approval final acceptance into ELCA rostered ministry
Assignment
Regional
Synod
Call to service
22. What is a Diaconal Minister? As a rostered ministry DMs:
Serve as a bridge between the world and the congregation
Bring the needs / problems of the world to the attention of the church
Bring the resources and problem-solving capabilities of the members of the church to the world
23. What is the difference between They are different calls
DMs are called to Word and Service
Pastors are called to Word and Sacrament
Rite is different
DMs are consecrated
Pastors are ordained
24. What is the difference between The foci are different
AiMs serve directly within particular congregations
DMs serve within congregations and within the world
Rites are different
AiMs are commissioned
DMs are consecrated
25. What is the difference between The call is the same
Deaconesses are part of a central Motherhouse
The main ELCA house is in Chicago
Deaconesses also come to us from Valparaiso University in Indiana
Deaconesses attend community events for a week every summer
DMs are a more loosely-knit community formed at Lutheran Theological Seminary in Gettysburg, PA
26. As a deaconess, I am part of a community of women who serve the church. This is much more than a professional organization. It is a true community. Sister Carol Burk
27. The histories are different. But they start in the same place.
28. The first deacons were men
29. It is not right that we should neglect the word of God in order to wait on tables. Therefore, friends, select from among yourselves seven men . . . whom we may appoint to this task, while we, for our part, will devote ourselves to prayer and to serving the word.
What they said pleased the whole community, and they chose Stephen, together with Philip, Prochorus, Nicanor, Timon, Parmenas, and Nicolaus.
Acts 6:2 (NRSV)
30. But women soon followed . . .
32. Continued in the early church
Degenerated into a purely liturgical office and stepping stone to the priesthood around 325.
The Bruderhaus appeared in Germany in 1833 as a group of unmarried Lutheran men who lived together and took care of young orphan boys (the Salvation Army and YMCA came out of the same movement)
33. Theodore and Fredericke Fliedner started a halfway house in Kaiserwerth, Germany, for freed female prisoners (1836)
Organized to care for children, the poor, and the ill
All trained as nurses
14,000 women joined in the 1st 50 yrs
William Passavant imported a group of Kaiserwerth deaconesses in 1849 and another group in 1884
to work in hospitals
to shelter orphans from our own Civil War
You sisters are the Bible that your patients read. Elizabeth Fedde (1910)
34. Several more houses opened around the US during the next 100 years
Women worked as teachers, nurses, orphanage administrators, church workers
Lutheran nuns
Remained single or left when they married
Most houses closed in the mid-20th century when more opportunities for service became available to women
35. In the late 1980s the LCA and ALC voted to postpone decisions on ministry until after the merger (1988)
Created a task force to study
National Assembly (1993) accepted most of the task forces recommendations and created an office of Diaconal Ministry
First consecrations took place in 1996.
36. SO . . . The diaconate is both one of
the oldest and one of the youngest ministries in the church.
37. Where are Diaconal Ministers? Consecrated Diaconal Ministers in the ELCA (as of September 2006)
106 serving in 35 Synods in all 9 Regions
141 Candidates in 52 Synods in all 9 Regions
38. 40 Congregational Calls in 16 Synods in 7 Regions Lay Minister (5)
Christian Education (1)
Youth & Family (7)
Parish Ministry (25)
Community (2)
39. Chaplaincy (26)
College
Hospitals
Nursing Homes
Synod Staff / Ecumenical (14)
Interim Ministries (2)
Social Services (3)
Government advocacy (1)
State of Colorado
Healthcare Advocacy (2) 48 Synodical Calls in 26 Synods in 9 Regions
40. Churchwide Calls Regional Coordinators for Ministry Leadership (2)
Lutheran Disaster Response (1)
Churchwide Office in Chicago (2)
Lutheran School of Theology (1)
41. Where are Deaconesses?(as of August 2000) 160 deaconesses in the ELCA
35 rostered as Associates in Ministry
17 serve as pastors
1 serves in Diaconal Ministry
Remainder are retired or without call
43. In the rite of consecration, Diaconal Ministers are asked to
Seek out those places where the Gospel of Jesus Christ meets human need. Serve Christ with pastors and bishops, other diaconal ministers, and associates in ministry. Empower, equip and support all the baptized in the ministry of Jesus Christ.