Valparaiso Project Archives - EMU News /now/news/tag/valparaiso-project/ News from the ²ÝÝ®ÉçÇø community. Mon, 22 Sep 2014 21:21:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 EMS Conference to Promote Church Vitality /now/news/2006/ems-conference-to-promote-church-vitality/ Mon, 23 Oct 2006 04:00:00 +0000 http://www.emu.edu/blog/news/?p=1252 In an often chaotic and fragmented world, how can church leaders encourage their members to pursue wholeness?

Dorothy Bass, director of the Valparaiso (Ind.) Project on the Education and Formation of People in Faith, will address this question at the School for Leadership Training (SLT) at Eastern Mennonite Seminary, Jan. 15-18, 2007. The program theme is, “Practicing Life Abundant in the Congregation and Daily Life.”

Dr. Dorothy Bass Dr. Dorothy Bass

Dr. Bass will help church leaders understand Christian practices, why they are important and how congregations can live these practices more deeply. Bass’s work on the Valparaiso project focuses on helping Christians live their faith with vitality and integrity in the world today.

Tuesday morning, Bass will lead a session titled “What are Christian practices and why do they matter?” Wednesday morning, she will focus on “Practicing our faith in the congregation and everywhere else,” and Thursday morning, she will speak on “Leading congregations in revitalizing Christian practices.”

, assistant professor of practical theology at Eastern Mennonite Seminary and SLT coordinator, said the conference focus is important “because church leaders are not the only ones who are harried and wrestling with the rapid changes in the church and the world – congregations are, too. Bass has a vision for congregations to thrive, not just survive, by embracing Christian communal practices that are truly life-giving.”

Many Workshops Offered

SLT participants will also select workshops on such topics as, “Dead Sea Scrolls, DaVinci Code and the Gospel of Judas,” “Young Adults on Mennonite Practices for the Future” and “Making our Churches Safe Places.”

SLT will also feature a concert by Jim Croegaert on Tuesday evening. Croegaert writes and performs praise and worship music and was formerly a leader and musician at Reba Place Fellowship in Evanston, Ill.

A Wednesday evening appreciation banquet will honor Ruth Brunk Stoltzfus and Ella May Miller for their pioneer work in Mennonite radio broadcasts.

Each day’s events will open with worship and music. Other activities include a forum with seminary dean and a pastors and church leaders forum.

Registration is $120 per person before the December 31 deadline. For more information and online registration, visit or call Linda Alley at 540-432-4698.

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Seminary Staffer’s Book Explores Young Adult Issues /now/news/2005/seminary-staffers-book-explores-young-adult-issues/ Tue, 02 Aug 2005 04:00:00 +0000 http://www.emu.edu/blog/news/?p=914 Sara Wenger Shenk "Thank You for Asking," a candid look at young adults and their relationship to the church, is the sixth book by Sara Wenger Shenk of the Eastern Mennonite Seminary faculty.
Photo by Jim Bishop

Many young adults want to belong to the church, but they are calling for significant changes. They are challenging the church to move toward a more real, honest and intimate way of being in community, welcoming their questions, failures, love for fun, potlucks and storytelling.

That’s the focus of the latest book by Sara Wenger Shenk, associate dean of Eastern Mennonite Seminary.

Herald Press, Scottdale, Pa., has released "Thank You for Asking: Conversing with Young Adults about the Future Church," by Dr. Shenk, who is also an associate professor of Christian Education at the seminary. (Click here for another article on Shenk’s book.)

Shenk received a grant from The Valparaiso Project on the Education and Formation of People in Faith to help fund the research that went into the book. She worked with a team of eight Mennonite-affiliated young adults who interviewed 56 of their peers from across the country, asking them questions about their experience with the biblical narrative, lifestyle choices and what they are seeking in the future church.

The stories emerging from the interviews form the basis of the book, with each chapter concluding with a "What I Hear" summary from the author. The book ends with a summary of the findings of the young adults’ views on such topics as scripture, the story of Jesus, how to relate to people of other faith traditions, community practices and their vision for the future church.

In a Foreword by Brian D. McLaren, a foremost authority on the future church, he states, "[These stories] represent a gritty, honest, unedited, blood-sweat-and-tears immersion into the spiritual, social, emotional and sexual lives of young adults. In all their beauty and chaos, integration and disintegration, they provide a window into the realities of ministry to people of all ages."

"My sense now, having completed this study, is that today’s ‘twentysomethings’ are more hopeful about the church, and especially the Mennonite Church and what it has to offer to the larger society, than what I was growing up," Shenk said.

A 1975 EMU graduate, Shenk received a master’s degree from Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary and an Ed.D. from Union Theological Seminary, Richmond, Va.

Shenk has been at EMS since 1992. Her husband, N. Gerald Shenk, is professor of church and society there. Together they spent two terms of study and service in Yugoslavia, 1987-89 and 1977-83, under appointment of , Salunga, Pa., and , Akron, Pa.

She has written five other books on theological and family life themes. They are: Anabaptist Ways of Knowing (Cascadia Press, 2003), Meditations for New Parents, co-authored with her husband, Gerald (Herald Press, 1996), Coming Home (Good Books, 1992), Why Not Celebrate! (Good Books, 1987), and And Then There Were Three: An Ode to Parenthood (Herald Press, 1985)

"Thank You for Asking" is available for $14.98 from the University Bookstore, Provident Bookstores and other retail outlets and from Amazon.com.

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