This campus ministry helps students hear God's
call to vocation through the art of mentoring.
U.S. News and World Report magazine
has recognized the university that I serve as having one of the best
undergraduate research programs in the country (September 1, 2003). At the
University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, the key to this success is
collaboration. Faculty, regardless of rank, work in partnership with
students, regardless of class, on projects of importance to both. The result
is excellence in learning.
At University Lutheran Church, the expression
of campus ministry at UW-Eau Claire, we see ourselves as a teaching parish
using the same collaborative model. University Lutheran is one of four
constituted campus congregations of the ELCA under the sponsorship of the
Division for Higher Education and Schools. We are a congregation of
community members and university students learning together what it means to
be the church not only in a wisdom (e.g., educational) setting but also in
society as a whole.
Everything we attempt to do as a congregation
and a campus ministry is subject to the Lutheran question, "What does this
mean?" As students and members work together in worship, study, fellowship,
or service, we consistently reflect on how this relates to an affirmation of
our baptism and our being joined to the ministry of the whole church.
In the early church, Tertullian wrote that
Christians are "made not born." At University Lutheran Church we are
intentional about the task of being made Christian together. In that same
early church, people were initiated into a process of discipleship in two
ways. Christian "content" was learned through formal catechesis, sermons,
and instruction. Christian "style" was learned through imitation and
mentoring. To learn to pray was to be joined with someone adept at prayer.
This early form of mentoring still holds much merit for those who are
concerned with Christian formation and the exercise of vocation.
Mentoring Vocation
The following examples illustrate the
mentoring experience through Lutheran campus ministry:
Each year over winter break, I travel to
Washington, D.C., with 55 students and selected faculty. We work as
volunteers in the inner-city schools and social agencies. Jason was a
history major when he went with us five years ago. He never dreamed that, as
a result of this trip, he would switch to history education and successfully
apply for a teaching position in the Washington inner-city high school where
he now believes he is putting his faith into practice.
Becca was a sophomore with an undeclared
major who this past summer worked in the National Youth Sports program on
our campus as a counselor with youth. She discovered, through a
collaborative effort with her supervisor who is a kinesiologist, that she
had a God-given gift for working with young people. Becca returned to school
last fall eager to work toward a degree in school psychology.
Each academic year, nine to twelve university
students teach Sunday school children at University Lutheran Church under
the guidance of Rachel, a former elementary public school teacher. The
teachers are installed each Fall during the worship service. They promise to
be diligent in their use of Word and sacrament, be an example of grace for
the children under their care, and use their talents and skills as gifts of
God. Many of the students are not education majors but have a deepening
commitment to Christian education. Many have graduated as teachers under the
care and guidance of Rachel.
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If "vocation" means to respond to God's voice,
then often in our setting God speaks through the mouths of our community
members who are bold enough to form friendships with students and become
involved in their lives. |
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If "vocation" means to respond to God's
voice, then often in our setting God speaks through the mouths of our
community members who are bold enough to form friendships with students and
become involved in their lives. This involvement often comes in the form of
an invitation when community members ask students to join them in efforts of
mutual challenge and importance.
Katy had never been to Community Table, a
local food service for the poor, until Pat, a physical therapist and one of
our community members, invited her to go along and serve dinner. Katy went
because it sounded interesting, and she thought she could be helpful. Little
did she realize that the dinner guests at Community Table would help her
find her vocation in social work.
Jim, an attorney and member of University
Lutheran Church, invited Michelle, a nursing major, to volunteer at Christ
House in Washington, D.C., ministering to homeless people with medical
needs. Michelle's vision of nursing was broadened as a result of that
experience so that it now includes the possibility of work beyond
traditional clinical nursing.
Rostered Vocations
One of the ways that I often describe
my campus ministry and the ministry of University Lutheran Church is that we
are involved in confirmation. Confirmation all too often is seen only as an
effort on behalf of adolescents rather than a continuous ministry of helping
each other find ways to identify with the life and mission of the whole
Christian community.
Because we are located in the midst of a
public institution, we mainly focus our attention on the students who will
be seeking work in the public sector. However, our congregation also has a
long history of encouraging people to prepare for ordained and rostered
ministry. The university has a Department of Philosophy and Religious
Studies and at one time offered Greek language study. In the past twenty
years there have been no fewer than two students affiliated with our
congregation who have entered seminary each year. Once again we feel that
University Lutheran Church is an incubator for seminary preparation.
Many years ago when I was a university
student with only a theological curiosity and no vocational plans, an
Episcopal pastor asked me a question that changed my life. "Would you like
to make a difference?" he asked. No one had ever put it that way before. It
is now a question I often ask students who I think might possess the gifts
for rostered ministry. Often I find that these students have given the
possibility serious thought but have not known what to do with their
questions.
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One of the ways I often describe my campus
ministry and the ministry of University Lutheran Church is that we are
involved in confirmation. |
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Jeremy came to worship every Sunday. He was
easy to spot because he stands 6 ft. 6 in. and hovers above everyone else.
One Sunday he asked to speak to me after our worship, and in the course of
our conversation I asked him how he thought God wanted him to make a
difference in the lives of people. Shyly, he answered that he thought God
wanted him to be a pastor. For the next two years we offered Jeremy
opportunities to teach Sunday school, assist in worship, and lead
discussions. Jeremy is now completing his second year at Wartburg Seminary.
Heidi was a part of University Lutheran
Church and the Lutheran Student Association from the beginning of her
freshman year. During her tenure at the university, Heidi became the
Coordinator of Liturgy, presided at weekly Evening Prayer, assisted at
weddings and funerals, taught confirmation, and accompanied me on hospital
visits. While Heidi knew she wanted to be a pastor, her experience here only
served to sharpen her vocational goals. Heidi, now serving a parish, knows
well the role a congregation can play in vocational formation.
According to the September 8, 2003 issue of
U.S. News and World Report, many university students are leaving college
with more than $19,000 in debt. Our congregation has come to realize the
effect that debt has on students who would consider four years of seminary
but cannot imagine (1) incurring more debt and (2) paying off the debt they
already have incurred.
University Lutheran Church has been invited
by the Fund for Theological Education (Lilly Foundation) to become part of
an experiment to assist students in their first year of seminary. If we are
to play a role in guiding students toward professional ministry, we also
must find ways to make that journey possible. Through the generosity of one
of our member families, we are in the process of establishing a ministry
fellowship so that we can join with the Fund for Theological Education and
the seminaries to offer financial assistance in at least a student's first
year. This gift is a tangible example of how a congregation can become a
part of the church's future.
The Northwest Synod of Wisconsin offers a Lay
School of Ministry that is a way our congregation encourages lay vocations.
Each year for the past 10 years, two members of our parish have joined 22
other individuals for a two-year course of study that includes Bible,
theology, and liturgy. Lay School graduates can be found throughout the
synod in ministries of teaching, visitation, and pulpit supply. Members of
University Lutheran Church who have completed the Lay School have been very
important in the mentoring of students because they can engage them in
theological reflection.
I am pleased that now, as a part of the newly
published (provisional) Renewing Worship resources, congregations will
continue to have available a rite for "Affirmation of Christian Vocation."1
The introductory rubrics describe the preparation for this service with
these words: "... such preparation would certainly include reflection on how
God's gifts of baptism, absolution, and communion shape the life of the
Christian in the world."
The promise included in the rite is as
follows:
"Will you endeavor to pattern your life on
the Lord Jesus in gratitude to God and in service to others, at morning and
evening, in work and in play, all the days of your life?"
If, at the conclusion of students' academic
career at the University of Wisconsin- Eau Claire through the ministry of
University Lutheran Church, they were able to respond, "I will, and I ask
God to help me," I would rejoice and delight that we have been a voice used
by God.
Endnote
- In
Occasional Services (1982) a similar rite is included, "Affirmation of
the Vocation of Christians in the World" (pp. 147-49). This rite was
republished, with a few revisions, in What Do You Seek? Welcoming the
Adult Inquirer (part of the Welcome to Christ catechumenate
series), Augsburg Fortress, 2000, pp. 99-101.
Donald A. Wisner is the Lutheran
campus pastor serving at University Lutheran Church at the University of
Wisconsin — Eau Claire. He is also adjunct faculty at Luther Seminary, St.
Paul, Minnesota, in the area of worship.
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