Please join us for our annual Lent Study and Fellowship evenings. Every Wednesday from February 17th, join in for a weekly Lenten study and fellowship time. The theme is ‘Called to Community’. Video and discussion will include thought provoking conversations on what the role of the church is (or should be) in todays society. Join in at St. James Anglican Church at 3774 Carp Road from 7pm – 9pm. Email huntleypriest@bellnet.ca or call 613-839-3195 for more info.
There is no cost to the program and a sign-up sheet for snack contributions will be available for those who would like to contribute to the fellowship time.

The program we will use comes to us from The Work of the People. The Work of the People is an independent ecumenical platform that produces and publishes multimedia to stir imagination, spark discussion and move people toward discovery and transformation.

Called to Community Curriculum Overview
In the midst of these radical shifts in our society and within Christianity itself, it is clearly time to revisit the question “What is the role of the Church?”

What is the Church’s role in the lives of individuals and families who no longer turn to it as the center of their social and family structure? What is the Church’s role in a world that increasingly sees it as irrelevant or even antithetical to human progress? What is the Church’s role in the lives of the people who continue to return to it as a source of strength, inspiration, solace and connection with God? What is the Church’s role in the lives of the people who have never walked through one of our doors and those who have sworn they never will again?

Our generation’s answer to these questions will have a reverberating impact on the course of human history. Will the Church “die”? What about resurrection? Is there a clear line between the two or are they both happening simultaneously before our eyes?

This curriculum features several of our generation’s wisest souls reflecting on these issues and the larger question of “What is the role of the Church?” Our prayer is that it sparks rich, rewarding and fruitful discussion and reflection for your small group and enables you to move through this time of rapid transition with love and with grace

This is a fascinating time to be alive. Let us give God thanks for the Church that was, the Church that is, and the Church that is becoming.

Christ’s peace,
Rich Nelson
your curriculum writer

The curriculum includes 7 films with accompanying discussion guide. Discussion materials will be printed out for each session.

SESSION TITLES AND FILMS

  1. WHAT IS THE CHURCH?” // Walter Brueggemann “Collision Course” video
  2. A CALL TO JUSTICE // Hannah Terry “Missional Imagination” video
  3. A CALL TO LOVE // Richard Rohr “Two or Three Gathered” video
  4. A CALL TO A KINGDOM WORLDVIEW // NT Wright “Long-Term Restoration Project” video
  5. A CALL TO BE THE BODY OF CHRIST// Malcolm Guite “Flesh & Blood” video
  6. WHAT IS THE CHURCH BECOMING? // Rachel Held Evans “Creating Something New” and Brian Zahnd “Come and Die” videos

ABOUT THE CURRICULUM WRITER

Rev. Rich Nelson is a disciple of Jesus Christ, husband, father and Episcopal priest who has served both Episcopal and Lutheran faith communities and an Episcopal school. He also co-founded Bridge Ministry of Burton, TX, an example of what it can look like when all 13 churches in and around one small town come together across denominational and racial differences to serve their community together in Christ’s name.

Rich continues to serve as a leader of Bridge Ministry but has recently stepped aside from congregational leadership to devote his ministry to writing and creating better resources for discipleship. His flagship program is “Following the Way,” an innovative discipleship resource to support individuals and small groups as they explore and live into the Shema/Great Commandment.

He is married to the Rev. Karen Buck Nelson and they have two sons. Karen is a pastor in the United Church of Christ. Their oldest son was baptized by a Methodist truck driver. Their youngest son was baptized by a Lutheran bishop. In his extended family is an Episcopal deacon, a former Orthodox monk and a Baptist preacher. Their family loves being an incarnation of a new era of ecumenism.

You can find him at www.revrichnelson.com, on Facebook and on Twitter @revrichnelson