Vantage Spring 07

16
VANTAGE SPRING 2007

description

Redeeming Creation.

Transcript of Vantage Spring 07

Page 1: Vantage Spring 07

VA N TAG E SpriNG 2007

Page 2: Vantage Spring 07

Pulitzer Prize winner Dan Carter is the first speaker in a series of five lectures, Religion and the South, sponsored by Columbia and Montreat Conference Center, in Montreat, NC, this summer. Montreat College is providing the meeting space at the Chapel of the Prodigal. Admission is free and open to the public.

Carter is the Education Foundation Professor of History at the University of South Carolina. He has been the Pitt Professor in American History at Cambridge University and has appeared frequently on NPR and PBS.

Marcia Riggs, the J. Erskine Love Professor of Christian Ethics, and Erskine Clarke, professor of American religious history, will present lectures, along with Sam Hill and Mary McClintock Fulkerson. Hill, who is considered the “dean” of religion in the South studies, is the author of numerous books and is the editor of the new Encyclopedia of Religion and the South. Fulkerson is associate professor of theology at Duke University. Her recent work includes studies of Appalachian women and religion.

Clarke, author of the highly acclaimed book “Dwelling Place: A Plantation Epic,” is the organizer of the lectures series, the inaugural event in program-ming which is being developed by Columbia’s faculty and Center for Lifelong Learning as a result of the seminary’s involvement with the Montreat Historical Collections. A significant portion of the collections, including personal papers and church records, is being transferred to the seminary as a result of the closing of the Presbyterian Historical Society’s location in Montreat. Hold-ings transferred to Columbia include archival, library, and museum materials of Presbyterian history and the worldwide Reformed tradition. The collection includes a large manuscript division, a library of bound books, and material artifacts of 500 years of Reformed history.

< Monday, July 23 Dan Carter Is There Still a Dixie: Race, Religion and Politics in the 20th Century South

Tuesday, July 24 Marcia Riggs When and Where I Enter: African-American Women on Race, Religion, and Social Reform in the 19th Century

Wednesday, July 25 Sam Hill Endlessly Fascinating: Southern Religion

Was, Is, and (Ever Shall Be)

Thursday, July 26 Mary McClintock Fulkerson Religion and Women in Appalachia

Friday, July 27 Erskine Clarke“I See No Obstacle To The Elevation Of The African”: John Leighton Wilson, Pioneer Missionary in West Africa

2VANTAGE Spring 2007 VANTAGE Spring 2007

Th e s e d a y s , a l o t i s b e i n g s a i d a b o u t o u r e n v i r o n m e n t - i n - c r i s i s . Global warming and a host of problems in the natural world are recognized as real and really serious issues: we humans are destroying God’s creation. So now, regardless of political or theological bent, we’re all talking—in newspaper and magazine articles, television reports, documentaries, and Sunday sermons—about how we need to be, and can be, better stewards of God’s abundant creation.

This is not a new conversation for most of us. Ages ago, the psalmist wrote, “The earth is the Lord’s, and all that is in it” (Psalm 24). For at least the last 30 years, in A Declaration of Faith,

we Presbyterians have publicly acknowledged our responsibility to “hold the earth in trust for future generations of living things.” We affirm our understanding that “the Lord forbids us to plunder, foul,

and destroy the earth.” And we are clear about what the Lord expects of us: “to produce, to consume, to reproduce in ways that make the earth’s goodness available to all people and reflect God’s love for all creatures.”

For nearly as long, with A Brief Statement of Faith, we have confessed that “we threaten death to the planet entrusted to our care. We deserve God’s condemnation. Yet God acts with justice and mercy to redeem creation.”

In this issue of Vantage, you will find numerous examples of how members of Columbia’s extended family are responding to the call to hold the earth in trust. You will see how God is working through them to redeem creation, and I pray you will be inspired to act. “For God has given us dominion over the works of God’s own hands and has put all things under our feet. O Lord, our Sovereign, how majestic is your name in all the earth” (Psalm 8).

L A U R A M E N D E N H A L L President

LECTURES AT MoNTREAT, JULy 23-27

Religion and the South

Redeeming Creation

We need to be, and can be,

better stewards of

God’s abundant creation.

Page 3: Vantage Spring 07

3VANTAGE Spring 2007 VANTAGE Spring 2007

The Board of Trustees has elected two new members. They are Richard A. “Rich” oglesby and Sue S. Williams, both of Atlanta, GA.

Rich oglesby is a lifelong member of Central Presbyterian Church, where his grandfather served as pastor. A banker, his church and volunteer activities include service as an Elder and as a member of the personnel and endowment committees. He also serves on the board of Children’s

Literature for Children. He is a graduate of Vanderbilt University. He and his wife, Caye, have four children, two of whom are away in college.

Sue Williams is a member of Trinity Presbyterian Church. A retired musician and teacher, her church and volunteer activities include Sunday School teacher, Elder, Clerk of Session, chair for worship and music ministry, chair of the arts committee, and the Church Relations Council for Warren Wilson College. She is a graduate of the University of North Carolina and earned the master of music degree from Georgia State University. She and her husband, Neil, have two grown children.

New Trustees Appointed to Board

as s o c i at e Pa s to rKatie Heard Day, Palms Presbyterian Church, Jacksonville, FLJoe Evans, Good Shepherd Presbyterian Church, Lilburn, GAMeg Flannagan, First Presbyterian Church, Dunedin, FLSharol Hayner, Peachtree Presbyterian Church, Atlanta, GABrandon Hood, Valley Presbyterian Church, Paradise Valley, AZAbby Keller, Greenville Cumberland Presbyterian Church, Greenville, TNPatrick Laney, First Presbyterian Church, Tuscaloosa, ALJames Rogers, First Scots Presbyterian Church, Charleston, SC

Chaplain/Internships & ResidenciesKathy Burton, Emory Healthcare, Atlanta, GAStephanie Coble, chaplain-volunteer services, Emmaus House, Atlanta, GA Kaye Florence, Veterans Administration Hospital, Jonesborough, TNKate McGregor Mosley, Central Presbyterian Church, Atlanta, GAMindy Serafin, chaplain, Indian River Medical Center, Vero Beach, FL

cl i n i c a l Pa s to r a l ed u c at i o nScarlette Bostick, Charleston, SCChristina Hicks, Grady Hospital, Atlanta, GAKaren Miller, Atlanta, GA

di r e c to r o f ch r i s t i a n ed u c at i o nDorothy Blackwelder, Dorchester Presbyterian Church, Summerville, SCBrandon Brewer, Winter Park Presbyterian Church, orlando, FLBill Searight, old First Reformed United Church of Christ, Philadelphia, PA

Graduate StudyRuss Blackwelder, pre-med student, College of Charleston (SC)

ot h e rManikka Bowman, lead organizer, Massachusetts Interfaith Committee, Boston, MAAni Goodenberger, Christian Ministry in the National Parks, Grand Teton National Park, near Jackson Hole, WyKaren Jolly, registered nurse at children’s residential psychiatric facility, Viera, FLBethany McKinney, special education teacher, Los Angeles, CAJohn Richardson, vice president of development, Montreat Conference Center, Montreat, NCSarah Searight, assistant director of urban ministries, old First Reformed United Church of Christ, Philadelphia, PA

Pa s to rMaryellen Hittel, Rockmart Presbyterian Church, Rockmart, GAKatie Hudson, Middle Presbyterian Church, Mt. Pleasant, PAJerry Long, First Presbyterian Church, Andalusia, ALApril Love-Fordham, Calvary Presbyterian Church, Marietta, GAMike Sorsen, First Presbyterian Church, Emporia, KSCory Stott, Trinity Presbyterian Church, Meridian, MSCraig Topple, Westminster Presbyterian Church, Santa Fe, NM

yo u t h a n d fa m i l i e sMichael York, interim director of youth and families, Alpharetta Presbyterian Church, Alpharetta, GA

Class of 2006 Placements

@

this point

Church without walls. Church as going out, rather than coming in.

Church as blog. New movements are shaking up “church business as usual” with new

kinds of worship, mission, evangelism, community. Will this be the church of our children and grandchildren? What do our “brick and mortar” churches have in common with these unique communities?

Join Professors Steve Hayner, Martha Moore-Keish, and others for an introduction to these emerging movements—their practices, worship, community, mission and theology.

The current issue, on Fear, is still available at www.atthispoint.net!

THE CHuRCH iS on THE MovE . . .

new issue coming in May!

@

Page 4: Vantage Spring 07

J U L I E L E H M A N , ‘ 9 2

Unless your denial skills are uncanny and extend to all things seen and heard, you are probably aware that the world is in bad shape. Those of us who have been paying attention to the overwhelming evidence realize that for the first time in human history humans are capable—and apparently willing—to threaten not just their own survival but that of all life on the planet. With that possibility becoming accepted by the mainstream culture, faith leaders are now called to exercise their prophetic role above all others.

Our denomination exercised this prophetic role itself back in 1990 at the 202nd General Assembly by adopting the policy report Restoring Creation for Ecology and Justice. From that report evolved the movement we now know as

Presbyterians for Restoring Creation. Their belief is that God calls the Presbyterian Church (USA) to “…respond to the cry of creation by engaging in the effort to make the 1990’s the ‘turnaround decade.’” Further, they assert that restoring creation is a “…central concern of the church, to be incorporated into its life and mission at every level.”

As an environmentalist and theologian, I can easily agree with the statements and assertions above. As a person of faith, I find myself wishing it was 1990 again!

Sustainability as a Spiritual DisciplineWhile some experts now predict it may be too late to turn things around,

such news does not excuse us from heeding our call as the people of God, but rather demands a more urgent and courageous response. As I have wrestled with how to reverse the trend towards global self-destruction, I have come to believe that we must begin with a personal and community response. By elevating sustainability to the level of spiritual discipline, we can replace despondence with faith and powerlessness with activism.

continued on next page

4VANTAGE Spring 2007 VANTAGE Spring 2007

OLLOQUIUM07A P R I L 1 6 - 1 8

The Word for a Warming World:T H E B I B L E , T H E C H U R C H , A N D T H E G R O A N I N G S O F C R E AT I O N

A L U M N I / A ER E U N I O NC L A S S E S

1956 and before19571962196719721977198219871992199720022006

Colloquium 2007 focuses on the church’s encounter with global ecological crisis.Through plenary presentations, panels,and workshops, we will explore the broad contours of the crisis, develop biblical perspectives for Christian care of thecreation, and offer resources for ministry in times of travail.

W O R K S H O P S

The Seven Ways of Creation:A Field Guide to the Cosmogonies of Scripture

Nature and Culture:Why We Think the Way We Think About the World

Greening Your Congregation:Making People of Faith People of Action

The Wilderness/The Cultivated Land:Expressing Isaiah’s Images Through Art

Greening the Church, and We Don’t Mean Advent!:Music and Liturgy for Worship

Sustaining Creation: Practices for a Healthier World

K E Y N OT E P R E S E N T E R S

Terence Fretheimauthor of God and World in the Old Testament:A Relational Theology of CreationLuther Seminary, St. Paul, MN.

Barbara Rossingauthor of The Rapture Exposed:The Message of Hope in The Book of RevelationLutheran School of Theology, Chicago, IL.

P R E A C H E R Barbara Brown-Taylorauthor of Leaving ChurchPiedmont College,CTS adjunct faculty.

Register by March 29! Details and registration form online

at www.ctsnet.edu > What’s Newor contact Barbara Poe

[email protected] or 404-687-4566

C A R i n GGod’s C R E AT I o N

for

Integrating Creation Care into the Life of Faith

Page 5: Vantage Spring 07

5VANTAGE Spring 2007 VANTAGE Spring 2007

Walking yourself into Creation CareI have often found that actions

can steer the soul when it is unable to lead us. Starting earth stewardship in the most local and personal realm, namely our homes, will begin us walking humbly with God. Simple and concrete acts such as replacing the light bulbs in your own home with compact fluorescents can open your eyes to what God calls us to do in these excessive times.

In a recent clergy environmental breakfast in Asheville, a Lutheran pastor shared how he had recently called his representative to register his voice. He described being immensely rejuvenated after hanging up the phone, and wondered why he had not done so 20 years ago! As those called to lead the people of faith, our example can be a powerful witness. Seeing the minister practicing sustainability compels others to follow. I was profoundly moved to understand the spiritual nature of sustainable living when I noticed a minister whom I highly respected drinking water from an old Diet Coke bottle!

Walking your Church into ActionI am involved in a Sunday school class at my church, First Presbyterian

Church of Asheville. We call it the “Greening of the Church” class. Meeting to prepare the 12-week series, the planning team jokingly named ourselves the “Green Guerillas.” Worrying that this name might scare people away from attending, we decided to change our name to the “Green Gorillas.” Upon learning of the change, our pastor encouraged us to hold fast to the concept of green guerilla (possibly aware that sometimes making important changes in the church requires guerilla tactics!). His support and the enthusiastic response of the participants allowed us to become a permanent faith development opportunity. The class now functions as regular planning and strategizing time for the greening of our church. We discuss projects big and small, individual and communal, within the church and in the broader community. We keep each other informed of local advocacy and informational events and report back to the class on what we’ve learned. The primary goal for the class has become to make our class obsolete!

Many resources are available to help your congregation become more earth conscious. My favorite is the “Greening Congregations Handbook” published by Earth Ministry out of Seattle (www.earthministry.org). Also having your church join Presbyterians for Restoring Creation doesn’t cost much, but allows your church to support our denomination’s national movement, as well as accessing resources to assist your own congregation’s greening efforts.

An impressive national interfaith organization devoted to deepening the connection between ecology and faith is the Regeneration Project. Its recent campaign, known as Interfaith Power and Light (IPL), mobilizes people of all faiths to recognize and fulfill their responsibility for the stewardship of creation. Specifically, the IPL campaign is mobilizing a national religious response to global warming while promoting renewable energy, energy efficiency and conservation. To connect with your state’s chapter, or to help establish one if yours doesn’t yet have one, visit www.theregenerationproject.org.

One final way for any church to quickly become green and promote sustainability on a national scale is to purchase renewable energy credits (RECs) from one of the many providers on the market today. Renewable energy credits offset your church’s power use by subsidizing clean energy sources, helping them someday become available to all across our national power grid. A document explaining the specifics of this opportunity is available off the EPA’s Web site at www.epa.gov/greeningepa/content/energy/pdf/greentags.pdf.

With the increasing number of ways to get your church connected with effective ways to practice responsible and caring earth stewardship, being complacent is no longer acceptable. While environmentalism might still be an issue that evokes conflict, it’s well worth our attention.

Julie Lehman is Director of Church Relations at Warren Wilson College, Asheville, NC

I try to keep creation care in the forefront of my congregation’s collective mind. First, I frequently include these issues in our prayers of confession and intercession as well as referring to environmental issues and concerns when appropriate in the sermon. We’re in the mountains of western North Carolina and our summer population swells with weekenders and summer residents. Therefore, last summer I preached a series of sermons about our “spiritual geography” in an attempt to “hallow the hollers and magnify the mountaintops.” We took a big step this fall when we participated in the North Carolina Council of Churches’ showing of the film An Inconvenient Truth. It was a small, but important, step in raising the moral/ethical/spiritual concerns regarding global warming. And last but not least, we adopted one of the busiest (and trashiest) miles in the county for monthly litter control. Before entering seminary I had a brief career as an environmental consultant and my call to care for creation is one of the main reasons I entered Columbia. It’s an issue close to my heart and integral in my sense of call.

B I L Ly R o B I N S o N ’ 9 7 Pastor Mount Jefferson Presbyterian Church West Jefferson, NC

2006 holiday float promoting compact fluorescent bulbs, sponsored by nC interfaith

Power and Light, and nC Council of Churches.

Page 6: Vantage Spring 07

6VANTAGE Spring 2007 VANTAGE Spring 2007

C A R i n GGod’s C R E AT I o N

for

Road Kill J U L I E C L I N E ’ 9 5

I began the automatic drive from my parents’ house to the hospital: two turns right, a turn left, left again and some distance before the turn onto the hospital’s road. At the elevator doors another visitor asked me which floor the cafeteria was on. I had to think—which hospital was I in? “It’s on the second floor—the Terrace Garden I think they call it.” Or was that the hospital where my mother had had her shoulder surgery? Or perhaps one of two hospitals where dad was treated for his heart attack? No I was right, this was the hospital of the Terrace Garden.

I found my mother awake and anxious. I helped her scoot up in the bed. I readied her tray table for the evening meal. The nurses had given her Ativan before I arrived. Afternoons were the worst for her. Her depression deepened and her anxiety rose more than at any other time of day. I stayed with her until her meal came and the Ativan kicked in. She dismissed me to go feed my father.

It was growing dark and I was ready to reverse the automaticity of the drive to the hospital. I made the first turn without thinking and would have continued on in this robotic manner, had I not seen the body of a dead raccoon in the middle of the main road. It had just been hit. Its fur was ruffling in the breeze generated by passing cars. It was beautiful and wild—and quite dead. I cried for the raccoon all the way to my parents’ house. When I arrived there, I tried to call the city to have the body picked up, but the offices were closed.

On my return trip to the hospital, my headlights revealed that the raccoon’s body was still intact. It remained that way through my last drive that night. Inevitably, I thought, it would be hit again, and the next day, in the early morning, when I drove in to catch the doctors on their rounds, the creature’s intestines were exposed and escaping its body. Later, as I drove back to check on my father, the body of the raccoon had been spun around so that its intestines were no longer visible.

On Sunday morning, as I had approached the rise on which the raccoon had met its death, I was elated to see that the body was gone—and then devastated when I realized that, no, it was still there. It had been smashed flat. As a young adult I had seen the car in front of me hit a sleek, brown and black dog. The dog went down on the pavement, the car roared on. I stopped. The dog was dead. I dragged him to the sidewalk for his family to find him. Passing the flattened raccoon, I tried to articulate some philosophical statement about a culture that, on a daily basis, ignores the deaths of beautiful creatures, but mostly I just wanted the raccoon and that sleek young dog to be alive again.

In 2004 my father had a heart attack and a stroke. After recovering from both, he slid into the creek that runs through my parents’ yard and broke his leg. My mother was exhausting herself overseeing his care, so I stepped in to help. The experiences we are sharing have awakened my internal voice, and it seems that it won’t shut up. I have written several pieces about those experiences. What follows is an excerpt from “Road Kill.” At that time my parents were 87 and 90. Early in 2007 my father will celebrate his 92nd birthday. Later on, if she is still oriented enough to understand, my mother will celebrate her 90th. Over the years, as my husband and I have struggled to meet both our own and my parents’ needs, we have come to appreciate the meaning of the word “long” in the phrase “long-term care.”

— Julie Cline

“Road Kill” is included in Heating and Air, a collection of essays Julie Cline has written about caring for her parents. You can read the essays online at web.mac.com/marylamar. Links are on the lower left side of the page.

Dorchester Presbyterian Church, in Summerville, SC, is home to a 46-acre wildlife sanctuary with three quarters of a mile of walking trails. The land was purchased

at the very low sum of $12,000 from Westvaco Corporation in 1990 with the understanding that the land would

remain perpetually undeveloped as a nature preserve. The wildlife sanctuary adjoins the Dorchester State Park thus

maintaining a natural travel lane for wild animals.

The wildlife sanctuary is home to whitetail deer, raccoon, opossum, cottontail and marsh rabbits, gray fox, and

an occasional bobcat. The preserve has the only remaining original creek bed for the Saw Branch Creek which the

Army Corp of Engineers turned into a canal in the late 1960s.

As development continues in the area with more and more woodlands giving way to shopping malls and

subdivisions, Dorchester will be the keeper of 46 acres of natural wetlands and hardwoods.

Come and take a walk on the trails!

R I C H A R D C U S H M A N ’ 6 5 | Pastor

www.dorchesterpresbyterian.org/wildlife_sanctuary.htm

Page 7: Vantage Spring 07

7VANTAGE Spring 2007 VANTAGE Spring 2007

C A R i n GGod’s C R E AT I o N

for

For the past two summers, I have led mission teams to Chimaltenango, Guatemala, to plant trees and build low-cost, energy-efficient wood stoves through the Alliance for International Reforestation (AIR). The trees help to prevent erosion, and the stoves use less than half of the wood that the natives normally use on ground fires to cook their food as well as ventilate smoke out of their tiny homes. AIR was begun more than a decade ago by Anne Hallum, head of the political science department of Stetson University in Deland, FL, and a member of First Presbyterian Church, in Deland.

R Ay M o N D G U T E R M A N ’ 8 0Senior pastorFirst Presbyterian Church, ocala, FL

While she is on sabbatical this term, Kathy Dawson, assistant professor of Christian education, is studying early childhood education programs that are connected to churches. In Westlake, CA, she visited the Westminster Presbyterian Church Preschool, which has a new outdoor education classroom inspired by Richard Louv’s book Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder. The outdoor learning space includes an extensive sand area with sand toys and real pots and pans, a playhouse, nature sorting area, and rolling hill. Soon there will be a rock creek for water play. Musical instruments played on the outdoor stage are “waterproof,” and a marimba is on the way. The program director’s slogan is, “There’s no bad weather, only bad clothing.” The goal is for the children to choose freely whether they are outside or inside with perhaps equal time spent in each area.

For more information, go to www.wpcwestlake.org and click on Preschool.

Our church is trying to practice R-R-R: Reduce, Reuse, Recycle. Our missions team includes Jackie Baxley, an environmental engineer, who guides us in “baby steps” of awareness and action, such as the daycare center’s composting program, collecting paper products for recycling, and using paper plates. For Furman University’s Center for the Theological Exploration of Vocation, I recently taught a course titled “Does God Recycle? Theology and Ecology.” For the course, biblical, theological and liturgical resources give clarity to the relationship between nature, human nature and God.

A L M A S T E R S ’ 7 6 (D.Min.’91) | PastorSt. Andrews Presbyterian Church | Taylors, SC

Al Master’s course outline, with many useful resources, is available online at www.ctsnet.edu > News and Events > Vantage. During Colloquium ’07 he and Columbia students will lead the workshop “Sustaining Creation: Practices for a Healthier World.”

lt all started this past fall when I scheduled two classes for the same time. I’m not sure what I was thinking, but the result was me standing outside the registrar’s office trying to select a new course that would fit into my already over-packed schedule. By then, the choices were limited and none screamed my name. After a lot of hemming and hawing, I finally picked two six-week courses thinking if I didn’t like them at least they were only six weeks.

The first course, taught by associate professor Stan Saunders, was titled New Creation and Ecology: Practicing in the Garden. Honestly I wasn’t all that excited about it. But in six weeks, this course changed how my husband and I live and how I think about ministry.

In class, we read and heard and talked about the state of the earth today and the ways we are blatantly abusing this gift that we have. We talked about how much pollution we create by turning on lights and leaving them on. We talked about the benefits (for the earth and our health) of organic food. We talked about the value of spending time outdoors, the value of darkness (real dark, where you can see the stars), the value of being in balance with the world around us. We talked about how blessed we are with what’s literally right outside our door, and how little we take advantage of it (let alone care for it).

We also shared ways we are trying to live more ecologically-friendly and sustainable lives. I was surprised by how many people were already doing little things (and big things) to make a difference. We created a Web site, New Creation and Ecology (http://ctsecology.wordpress.com), to share our ideas and inspire new ones. Starting as a class project, the site has morphed into a resource for “green living” on campus. It contains some of the course’s final projects, and each week I post new information I’ve found either online or by word-of-mouth that can help us all live “ecologically-friendlier” lives.

It’s just a start, but when I think about ministry, now it’s more than people and congregations. I think about the world as well. The Bible is clear about the benefits and gifts of the earth. As ministers, we need to be models in our stewardship of the earth. We need to lift up the beauty of the earth in our sermons and liturgies; we need to talk about environmental issues in our session meetings; we need to make sure our congregations are turning off the lights, recycling their cans, and doing the little things that make such a big difference when all is said—and done.

Resources for Green Living on Campus

http://ctsecology.wordpress.com S A R A H WA L K E R C L E AV E L A N D ’ 0 7

Page 8: Vantage Spring 07

8VANTAGE Spring 2007 VANTAGE Spring 2007

C A R i n GGod’s C R E AT I o N

for

Sheppards and Lapsley Presbytery

Removing the Marvel Slab R o B E RT H Ay ’ 8 4Associate Executive Presbyter for Nurture

We have a great story to tell from Alabama and Sheppards and Lapsley Presbytery, and it includes many Columbia graduates. We are creating a new camp and conference center, Living River, on four miles of the Cahaba River, one of the most diverse streams in the world. We have been working closely with the Cahaba River Society and The Nature Conservancy to be good stewards of the river and the environment. Part of our stewardship, as we develop Living River, involved the removal of an old dam from the river.

For this work, Presbyterians for Restoring Creation presented the presbytery with one of two awards they gave last year at General Assembly, in Birmingham. The article below explains the project, and here are the Columbia graduates who have been involved with me in all of this:

• Rick Atkerson ’93, presbytery treasurer, Birmingham; treasurer for Living Rivers Board

• Richard Brooks ’80, interim pastor, Eastminster Presbyterian Church, Birmingham; trustee of the presbytery

• Sid Burgess ’90, pastor, Edgewood Presbyterian Church, Birmingham; Living River Campaign Committee

• Frank Covington (D.Min. ’92), pastor, First Presbyterian Church, Auburn; Living River Campaign Committee

• Elizabeth Goodrich ’03, Gardendale Presbyterian Church; Living River Board • Cary Speaker (D.Min.’76), pastor, Mountain Brook Presbyterian Church,

Birmingham; Living River Campaign Committee • Dan Stephens ’04, associate pastor, Shades Valley Presbyterian Church, Birmingham;

Living River Board • Ron Stone ’82, pastor, First Presbyterian Church, Selma;

Living River Campaign Committee • Dana Waters ’58, past interim presbytery executive and retired from South Highland

Presbyterian Church, Birmingham

As our Campaign for Living River spreads into congregations, these additional members of the Columbia “family” are working at the congregational level.

• Charlie Durham, Columbia trustee and pastor, First Presbyterian Church, Tuscaloosa• Denny Read ’02, associate pastor, South Highland Presbyterian Church• Noelle Read ’99, associate pastor, South Highland Presbyterian Church• Jim Stanford ’70, pastor, First Presbyterian Church, Sylacauga• Rachel Winter ’00, associate pastor for campus ministry,

First Presbyterian Church, Auburn

In 2001, the Presbytery of Sheppards and Lapsley purchased 440 acres with four miles of river frontage on the Cahaba River, in Alabama. We immediately began working with the Cahaba River Society and The Nature Conservancy to remove a dam commonly called the Marvel Slab. For years, these conservation groups had been working to get the dam removed, but the presbytery was the first landowner willing to join them in the effort.

The Marvel Slab, in northern Bibb County, had been built by a coal company in the 1960s to allow trucks to cross the Cahaba easily as they transported coal to Birmingham from strip mines in that area. The slab was an obstruction to fish that needed to move upstream to feed, breed, and elude predators. For almost a half-mile upstream, the dammed-up water drowned riffles and shoals that should have been teaming with life.

Seven endangered fish and mollusks are found in this reach of the river. Surveys for fish found many types in great numbers crowded below the dam and much fewer above the barrier. Scientists had seen redhorse (bottom-feeding fish known for their stamina) banging their heads against the concrete barrier in futile efforts to get to their ancestral breeding grounds. Snails and mussels had been virtually eliminated from the river for some distance downstream while they thrived in the unaffected habitat upstream. The incredible Cahaba lily no longer populated the area around the Marvel Slab.

In 2004, the Marvel Slab was successfully removed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in partnership with the Presbytery of Sheppards and Lapsley, The Nature Conservancy, the Cahaba River Society, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, and the Bibb County Commission.

To minimize harm to animals during the dam’s removal, experts snorkeled for three days removing mollusks within 10 feet of the dam. Scientists hand-picked and identified more than 12,000 snails and mussels, including more than 4,000 that were protected by the Endangered Species Act, then carried them a short distance out of harm’s way. Shortly thereafter, demolition began, and by the end of October 2004 the water flowed gently across bedrock shoals and boulders.

This extraordinary work, which protects interests of landowners, the state, and river conservationists, has been described by The Nature Conservancy as one of the most ambitious river restoration projects in the Southeast. Throughout this part of the country, thousands of abandoned small dams and diversions still exist on waterways. We hope the Marvel Slab removal sets a precedent.

For more information about Living River: A Retreat on the Cahaba, go to www.livingriver.org or www.pslpcusa.org.

We are grateful to numerous sources for information used in this article, including Presbyterians for Restoring Creation, Randy Haddock of the Cahaba River Society, and the Presbytery of Sheppards and Lapsley. For more information about the Marvel Slab Project, see Vantage Online at www.ctsnet.edu > news and Events > vantage.

Earth Covenant Ministry Columbia faculty members William Brown, Mark Douglas, and Stanley Saunders are among the organizers of Earth Covenant Ministry, a partnership among congregations of the Presbytery of Greater Atlanta and other faith-based organizations and individuals responding to the biblical and denominational call to renew right relationship with God’s Earth. This ministry will provide support and oversight for an ordained minister who will work among the presbytery’s congregations to

• Integrate the call to care for God’s creation into the church’s teaching and ministry of the Word and Sacrament

• Provide resources for education, worship, spiritual renewal, and practical application

• Nurture the growth of a creation-care network across the presbytery• Create presbytery-wide and ecumenical events for education, action,

public witness, and advocacy• Work with national and local faith-based networks as well as local environmental organizations

Contact: Allen Jenkins at [email protected]

Page 9: Vantage Spring 07

C A R i n GGod’s C R E AT I o N

for

VANTAGE Spring 2007 VANTAGE Spring 20079

Inside Out To M R o D Dy ’ 6 1 , D M I N ‘ 8 4

This new phase of my life began on a dark February afternoon with a routine angiogram to see if the cardiologist could get some more blood flow to my legs so they would not hurt when I ran. “While we are in there let’s take a look at your coronary arteries.” In my semiconscious state I remember him saying, “Oh dear, we are going to need a surgeon for this.” In three days I was back for a triple coronary artery bypass.

While recovering in the hospital my youngest daughter said that she knew some people who could help stop artery disease. “Anything to keep me from having to do this again,” I said. One of the persons she connected me with was David Wolf, a natural food advocate. He said things like “if you pollute the inside you will pollute the outside and that the best way to make the environment healthy is to become incredibly healthy yourself.” I was introduced to the world of good fats (olive oil) and bad fats (transfats, hydrogenated oils). I saw beakers full of greasy white stuff that represented the fat content of a Whopper. I had watched my salt and caffeine levels, but this was a whole new ballgame. I learned that high heat can cook the life out of vital enzymes and minerals in those pretty green leafy vegetables. I learned how sugar can send the body on a daily roller coaster ride. There are even fruits that are high in sugar. Avoid bananas and carrots? This is crazy, I thought. In restaurants, I would ask that my fish be grilled without salt using only olive oil. Much of this information is mainstream now, but when I started it seemed that I was kooky. At Bodies the Exhibit I saw clogged arteries as well as clean arteries. It does not take much plaque to make a stroke. I thought that my body was an intricate filtering system. It is but I overloaded it. I have good genes so why worry? My granddad lived until he was almost 91. But he lived on a farm and raised many of his own vegetables. There were more trees and open space, fewer cars and factories, and fewer chemicals in the air and food.

If I do not want to pollute my body, I become immediately interested in how my fruits and vegetables are grown. Are they full of chemicals? If they are organic, how can I know? Where can I buy organic? We began visiting a Saturday market where local organic farmers sell their crops. What about the water I drink?

I am concerned about the air and the number of trees that are cut down for development. I want to save the trees we have and the woodlands that are taken over by English ivy. We started a vegetable garden hidden among the ornamentals so neighbors will not think they are living next to a farm. In a few months we will have tomatoes and lettuce! It does not take much land for our family to supplement the organic vegetables we buy. I wonder how the neighbors would feel if I raised a beef steer? I would need their grass.

A DeKalb County (GA) public service ad asked residents not to put grease, oil, and fats down their disposals. Our human sewer system is developing sewer-pipe sclerosis, hardening and narrowing our vital

pipes that carry our waste. I did the same thing to my environment that I did to my body. Pollute the inside, pollute the outside.

What am I doing for my environment? I am putting my grocery money behind growers of organic fruits and vegetables; supporting food-processing companies whose products are low in fat, sugar, and salt. I am releasing land by not buying red meat. Now that I am cleaning up my body, I am able to see much more I can do to preserve this earth that supports us. The body and the environment are linked together. Pollute one. Pollute the other. Clean up one. Clean up the other.

In the dusk of this winter afternoon, I walked by the stream that formerly ran through a thicket of privet before I rooted it out. I leaned against the ancient trunk of a giant oak that I had rescued from rusted barbed wire cutting into its flesh and the thick ivy roots that snaked up to its canopy competing for a place in the sun. The stream and the oak seemed to thank me. Reward enough.

Tom and his wife, Alexandra, are former missionaries in Brazil. Tom was associate pastor of North Avenue Presbyterian, in Atlanta, and is president emeritus of the Atlanta Resource Foundation.

V A N T A g E C o V E R C R E D I T S

“ Whole World in God’s Hand” oil pastels on construction paper. Drawing by Sophie Crosby at the age of 6. She is the daughter of Dan and Deidra Crosby ’07.

Have you seen Vantage Online?

> Go to Vantage Online at www.ctsnet.edu

>> news and Events

>>> Vantage

Here are two things you can do to help

care for God’s creation:

• After you read this issue of Vantage,

pass it along to a friend or

colleague; or

• Take it to your neighborhood

recycling center.

Page 10: Vantage Spring 07

10VANTAGE Spring 2007 VANTAGE Spring 2007

brian Wren’s retirement as conant Professor of WorshiP this may and his subsequent move to Massachusetts will mark the conclusion of the day-to-day relationship between the seminary and this remarkable man, whose genius, warmth, and good humor have blessed us so richly. If the Old Testament “seven year” cycle of prosperity holds true, we have truly feasted at God’s board since Brian joined the faculty in 2000, and through his continued work in hymnody and worship, even at a distance, the banquet will continue.

Much of what the Christian world believes about congregational song and worship, from the theology behind the practice to the actual words on our lips, Brian has taught us. Some years ago, Erik Routley, the renowned hymnologist from Princeton and one of the catalysts of the “hymn explosion” of the 1970s, remarked that Brian Wren is “the most frequently sung hymn writer since Charles Wesley!” And that’s because Brian is not a rhymester, but a poet who composes from his heart.

If indeed we write most intuitively and instinctively about those people, places, and things we know most intimately, then Brian Wren and God must be the best of friends! And through Brian’s exquisite poetry, we have come to know God in ways we surely would have missed. What Brian has told us in his hymns, we already know, but his words have made God—Creator, Christ, and Holy Spirit—more real, more insistent, more accepting, and more loving than we could ever have expressed in our own words.

As a hymn writer, Brian has given us what we expected—not only songs to celebrate the seasons of the

church year, but also the Gospel imperative to live and serve by Christ’s example. The genuine delight of Brian’s hymns is getting what we don’t expect—the choice of a particular word, or an unusual turn of phrase—which enables us to see and hear and articulate the familiar in new and provocative ways.

The God of Genesis becomes the “Womb and Birth of time,” the “Carpenter of new creation.”

Jesus in the course of his life is at times the “Welcome Door,” the “Welcome Guest,” the “Wind of Change,” the “Worker Friend,” the “Light of Love,” the “Travel Guide,” the “Rock of Care.”

The indwelling of the Pentecostal Spirit becomes an active and not a passive presence:

Great nesting Spirit, sheltering with mighty wings your chattering, demanding brood, deep, restless love, come, stir us, show us how to fly, till, heading for tomorrow’s sky, we soar together, God-renewed.

These aren’t the commonplace images to which we are accustomed in so much of the poetry of our hymns, but carefully and

skillfully crafted impressions to capture our attention and spark our imagination.

It is not only Brian’s command of language which makes him an enduring spirit among poets, but his understanding and commitment to living out his faith which sets him above the rest.

Educated at Oxford University and ordained in Britain’s United Reformed Church, Brian is steeped in the tradition of the church, and knows the importance of tradition in worship—the words, the imagery, the movement, the call and response of praise and confession and penitence and pardon, of celebration and reflection. But reaching his maturity during that twentieth century period of enlightenment and heightened awareness of social injustice, sexism, racism, economic disparity and exploitation, Brian was not content to leave his faith buried in the tradition of a former time, but was compelled to let it speak—and speak eloquently—to a changing world.

In an interview for Reformed Worship this “Poet of Faith” observed: “There is a double vocation in being a poet in the church. One vocation is to write poems of faith which people will pick up and sing and say, ‘Yes, this is exactly the way I think,’ or ‘Yes, this is what I believe, although I’ve never put it this way.’ The other vocation of the poet is to try to speak truth by stepping beyond the church’s limits of comfort and convention. I usually know when I have written a ‘bread-and-butter hymn’—a hymn that people will be able to sing and say ‘Yes.’ I also know when I’m writing over the margin, although the margin is different for different people.”

This is where Brian’s contribution to congregational song combines courage with commitment —the boldness to voice in his poetry what he believes in his soul is right and just and holy in the face of narrow margins and narrow minds. It is here that this diminutive man derives his stature among the Reformers and crusaders, and where his texts gain their true and lasting strength. (One has difficulty comprehending a heart so big and all-embracing contained in so humble a frame!)

Who else ever invited us to sing:

If your faith brings you pain, scarred and scorned for doing right, God will dignify and bless, saying yes, and yes, and yes.

or reminded us that God transcends the labels we may assign:

God is not a she, God is not a he, God is not an it or a maybe. God is a moving, loving, knowing, growing mystery.

that death inevitably comes with a blend of agony and hope:

When grief is raw, and music goes unheard, and thought is numb, we have no polished phrases to recite. In Christ we come to hear the old familiar words: “I am the resurrection. I am life.”

that being called “Christian” without action is not enough:

Half the world is hungry, Lord,Christian people, sleekly fed, Christian comforts can afford— worship, faith, and heavenly bread. Others crave for earthly food; starving, have no strength to pray. Glib, we sing how God is good— we shall eat and drink today.

Columbia Theological Seminary

cordially invites you to

join the faculty, staff, and students

as we honor

br i a n a. Wr e n

John and Miriam Conant Professor of Worship

on the occasion of his retirement from the faculty

Thursday, April 12, 2007

5:00 p.m.

Festival of Worship

Campbell Hall Chapel

Reception following at the Presidents’ Home

R.S.V.P. by March 30

404-687-4521

Brian Wren P o e t o f f a i t h by Michael Morgan

Page 11: Vantage Spring 07

Alumni/ae1940sHoge Smith ’42 reports that at age 92 his ministry at Sunnyside Presbyterian Retirement Community in Harrisonburg, VA, continues in personal relationships and in writing occasional litanies for special services.

1950sRobert L. Montgomery ’53 recently had a book published: The Spread of Religions: A Social Scientific Theory Based on the Spread of Buddhism, Christianity, and Islam. Long Dash Books, 2007…..Robert S. Dendy ’57 is serving as stated supply at First church, Maxton, NC. He also acts as chaplain for Holland America Cruise Lines once or twice a year…..Fred W. McDaniel ’58 recently enjoyed a trip with his wife to visit family in Nuremberg, Germany.

1960sBobby Earl Pettit ’62 was confirmed as pastor emeritus of First church, Anderson, SC, by Foothills Presbytery and is serving as stated supply of Glenn Springs (SC) church…..Robert A. Wilson ’64 is retired and doing part-time interim work…..Sanders Read ’65 was honorably retired February 28, 2006, from Shiloh church in Raeford, NC. He has served several churches in South Carolina and also served with the Board of World Missions (PCUSA).

1970sBill Lancaster ’73 was one of the leaders of the Greenville, SC, area mission work of the PCUSA, and among 14 volunteers who traveled in late August to the Ninth Ward in New orleans to salvage a disabled house before bulldozers leveled it…..Etta Rossman ’76 has served 30 years as a Presbyterian minister and pastoral counselor. She is chaplain at the Virginia Correctional Center for Women, Goochland, VA, and pastor of Hawkins Memorial church, Ford, VA…..Michael Winters ’76 is pastor of Morton Grove (IL) church and serves as Moderator of the Presbyterian Hunger Program for the General Assembly. Working on behalf of the “Joining Hands Against Hunger” program, he has made a special appeal for justice for the hungry in Cameroon, where he spent two weeks in January…..John Thomason ’77, minister of Hamilton old Parish Church in Scotland, has published his first book, Can These Bones Live? It tells the 16-year story of the building of a new Reformed church for the Hungarian-speaking community in oradea, Romania…..Anna Case-Winters ’78 is in her 20th year on

11VANTAGE Spring 2007 VANTAGE Spring 2007

For the Record

the faculty at McCormick Seminary in Chicago as professor of theology. She is on sabbatical completing her second book, Down to Earth: A Christian Theology of Nature…..David Carriker ’79 has accepted a call as pastor at Waxhaw (NC) church.

1980sMaake Masango ’81, who teaches at the University of Pretoria, visited Cuba recently, participating in Fidel Castro’s 80th birthday lectures. He asks that we continue to pray for that country as changes are coming and church leaders need encouragement…..Robert ’81 and Laurey ’82 Murphy have moved to Houston, TX, where Laurey is pastor of the Spring Branch church…..Mark Jumper ’82 recently retired from the U.S. Navy as a commander in the Chaplain Corps, after 24 years of service (21 active duty). His final assignments were the Naval Chaplains School in Newport, RI, and the U. S. Coast Guard Academy in New London, CT. He is now senior pastor of Hope Evangelical Presbyterian Church in Libertyville, IL, and is a Ph.D. candidate at Salve Regina University in Newport, RI. He and his wife, Ginger, with their seven children (ages 4-14), live in Waukegan, IL…..Robert McCully (D.Min. ’84) is a full-time drug counselor at the Charlotte (NC) Rescue Mission, while serving as a part-time interim pastor and part-time college instructor..…Joe Wendorph ’86 is pastor of Markham Woods church, Lake Mary, FL…..Karen Whelchel-Redwine ’87

participated in the University of Georgia Chamber Choir in its June ’05 tour of Scotland and England.

1990sSara Burress ’91 is serving for a year as a volunteer at the Benedictine Sisters of Sacred Heart Monastery in Cullman, AL, which has a new experimental program allowing women to experience monastic life, and receive room and board in exchange for work, for up to a year…..Chris Carson ’96 is pastor of Madison church, Madison, GA…..Laurie valentine ’96 is parish associate at Trinity church, Winston-Salem, NC…..Becky Burton ’97 (D.Min. ’05) has a new call as pastor/head of staff at Peace Memorial church, Clearwater, FL…..Joe Clifford ’97 is pastor of First church, Dallas, TX…..Beth Grimshaw ’97 is director of pastoral care at Inghamn Regional Medical Center, Lansing, MI. She has a grant from the Formation and Education of People of Faith Valparaiso Practices Project to write a book on youth ministry. The book is titled 12 Baskets—Celebrating Youth Practicing Their Faith…..Bear Graham ’98 has been ordained and is pastor of Good Hope church, Iva, SC…..Stephen Hannah (D.Min ’99) has accepted a call as pastor at Ridgecrest church, Stanfield, NC.

our church has about 35 members (20 active) representing seven families, plus about five winter visitor families. Last year we decided to bring food each Sunday for HELP (the local ministry for needy families/persons) and with HELP’s guidance determined what foods were needed. So one month we bring rice, another powdered milk, etc. This little church provides an amazing amount of food each month. Several other churches heard about what we were doing and joined in. The result is amazing!...The church is a leader in local efforts to support “Relay for Life” Cancer Research....We provide water for walkers, a place for rest, plus pledge $1,000 for the cancer drive.

J A C K TAy L o R ’ 6 2Part-time stated supply pastorFirst Presbyterian Church Fort Meade, FL

that even in the face of AIDS the church must show compassion:

When illness meets denial and rejection, when friends recoil, and faces turn to stone, Christ of our Sorrows, raise us from dejection, to travel on, assailed, but not alone.

Forgive your Church’s searing, numbing silence, unholy huddles, muddles and delays. Forgive our zeal to hide the fear that drives us with harsh, unloving words, unhealing ways.

or enticed us with delicious humor:

Onward, Christian Rambos, spoiling for a fight, wave the flag for Jesus, knowing that we’re right!

We could not have asked for the blessing of a better companion these seven rich years than Brian Wren. He may not be leaving us a better singing community —for a few of us, making a “joyful noise” is something we take literally! But we are a community singing a better song because of his presence, not only among us, but in churches around the globe who sing their praises to a loving and demanding God.

Our prayer for Brian is best expressed in his own benediction:

May the Sending One sing in you, May the Seeking One walk with you, May the Greeting One stand by you, in your gladness and in your grieving.

May the Gifted One relieve you, May the Given One retrieve you, May the Giving One receive you, in your falling and your restoring.

May the Binding One unite you, May the One Belov’d invite you, May the Loving One delight you, Three-in-One, joy in life unending.

Quotations are from Piece Together Praise: A Theological Journey (Carol Stream, IL: Hope Publishing Company, 1996). Michael Morgan is the seminary musician, and he is organist at Central Presbyterian Church, Atlanta.

Page 12: Vantage Spring 07

2000sSherry Edwards ’00 and her husband, Steve, are moving to Libby, MT, where she is serving in a Tent Maker congregation…..Kazy Blocher Hinds ’00 is serving as interim pastor at Brentwood church, Brentwood, Ny. Joe Hinds ’99 serves as pastor of Springs Community church, East Hampton, Ny…..Connie Weaver ’00 began in January as associate pastor at First church, Asheboro, NC…..Joan Martin ’00 gave the prayer of invocation at the Carolina Panthers vs. St. Louis Rams game at Bank of America stadium, in Charlotte, NC. She is serving at Union church, Gastonia, NC…..Rick olson ’01 is pastor of Covenant church, Tuscaloosa, AL…..Dorie Griggs ’02 has a monthly column in the e-bulletin of the Southern Newspaper Publishers Association….. Elizabeth Goodrich ’03 has accepted a call to Gardendale (AL) Presbyterian Church and will be ordained March 11 at South Highland church, Birmingham….. Martin nabor (D.Min. ’03) is a teacher at the Ramsayer Lay Training Center at Abetifi in the Eastern Region of Ghana…..Stacy Welsh Cavanaugh ’05 is pastor of Westminster United Presbyterian Church, Galena, IL. Stacy married David Cavanaugh on September 23, 2006, in St. Louis…..Francis njoroge ’05 has been appointed director of theological education by extension. He was appointed by the General Assembly of Kenya shortly after his return to that county in June 2005….. Teri Peterson ’05 was ordained october 29, 2006, and is associate pastor at Ridgefield-Crystal Lake church, Crystal Lake, IL…..Jeff Ross ’05 has been called to active duty as a chaplain in the U.S. Navy. He and his wife, Britt, have moved to oceanside, CA…..Matt Schlageter ’05 was ordained october 22, 2006, at his home church in Daytona Beach, FL, and was received as a member of Greater Atlanta Presbytery in November. His call is to senior residency in pastoral services for Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta…..Devon Ducheneau ’06 received the master of social work degree from the University of Georgia in December…..Fred Wise ’06 married Jami Moss, director of annual giving, December 30, 2006, at oakhurst church, Decatur, GA.

BirthsLaurie valentine ’96 and Scott North twin daughters, Erin Linnon and Allison Claire, January 20, 2006.David Kwon ’01 and Hyo Jin a son, Isaiah o., August 21, 2006. Pen Peery ’03 and Lindsey a son, Wells Campbell, December 18, 2006.Stuart Higginbotham ’05 and Lisa a daughter, Evelyn Clare, January 11, 2007.Mike ’05 and Devon ’06 Ducheneau a daughter, Emma Marie, January 24, 2007.Tricia ’06 and Clay ’05 Thomas a daughter, Fields Katherine, December 27, 2006.

In MemoriamCharles Benz ’50 December 8, 2006Kirk nesbit ’51 February 15, 2007Bursell Munro ’54 May 20, 2006J. Gordon Bradford ’57 october 7, 2006Hugh D. Bowers ’61 october 26, 2006

Faculty and StaffCharles Campbell, Peter Marshall Professor of Homiletics, preached at the Daita Church in Tokyo, Japan; lectured and preached at the Sekkyo-Juku (“School of Preachers”) Symposium in Tokyo, Japan; led a session retreat and preached at Idlewild Presbyterian Church in Memphis, TN; gave the Percy Institute Lectures and preached at First United Methodist Church in Pensacola, FL…..Dent Davis, dean and vice president for Lifelong Learning, presented a paper, “Enacting the Story: Pilgrimage, Learning and Renewal in Ministry” at the annual meeting of the Religious Education Association/Association of Professors and Researchers in Religious Education; lectured at the University of Tennessee on “Personality Development and the Theory of Carl Jung;” spoke on “Leadership, Learning, and Ministry in the 21st Century” at the Presbytery of Middle Tennessee; met with the Educator Certification Council of the National Leadership Division, Leadership and Vocation office of the General Assembly; and led a workshop, “Leading the Church in Change,” as a part of the Savannah Presbytery Leadership Development Conference…..Laura Mendenhall, president, preached at Spanish Fort Presbyterian Church, AL; participated in a synod event for executive presbyters, chairs of committees on ministry, and committees on preparation for ministry; participated in the Presbyterian Seminary Presidents and Chairs of Board seminar on shared governance; was a leader for a Presbyterian Association of Musicians gathering; led the Association of Theological Schools task force on the relationship between the church and the seminary; preached at First Presbyterian, Covington, GA; led the Committee on Theological Education PC(USA); preached at the National Presbyterian Church, Washington, DC…..William Brown, professor of old Testament, taught a three-week adult Sunday School class on “Advent and the Cosmic Christ” at Trinity Presbyterian Church, Atlanta; gave a paper titled “Retrieving the Liturgical Voice of the Many Waters in Psalm 42” at the Society of Biblical Literature meeting in Washington, DC; served as a resource theologian for the Creation Covenant Ministry within the Presbytery of Greater Atlanta…..Carlos F. Cardoza orlandi, associate professor of world Christianity, preached at the 50th anniversary of his mother church, La Iglesia Cristiana (Discipulos de Cristo) in Villa Las Lomas, giving the closing sermon of a yearlong celebration “Witnesses of Hope”; gave a presentation titled “The New Agents of Mission and Evangelization: Renewed Theology and Practice of the Gospel” at the World Evangelism Consultation at Candler School of Theology, Emory University; his book, Mission: An Essential guide, was translated and published in Korea…..David Forney, associate dean of faculty and director of institutional research, chaired the Peace Unity and Purity report task force for the Presbytery of Greater Atlanta; published “To the one outside the Gate: A Missional Approach to Polity” in the Journal of Religious Leadership; taught “you Can’t outgive God: The Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard,” at First Presbyterian Church, Atlanta; taught a “PREPARE/ENRICH Workshop” at the seminary…..Erskine Clarke, professor of American religious history, taught Sunday School classes at Trinity Presbyterian Church, Atlanta; lectured for the Georgia Humanities Council in Brunswick, GA; preached and delivered the Preston Lectures at Shandon Presbyterian Church, Columbia, SC; spoke to a gathering of friends of Columbia at the Palmetto Club, Columbia, SC; was interviewed by Walter Edgar for his program “Walter Edgar’s Journal” on South Carolina Public Radio…..John A. Clark, communications specialist, taught a six-week course titled “The E-Word (Evangelism)” at Church of the Redeemer in Atlanta and a five-week continuing education course for Evening at Emory titled “Postmodernism Primer”…..Marcia Riggs, J. Erskine Love Professor of Christian Ethics, was a speaker for a reception honoring Dr. Peter Paris sponsored by The Fund for Theological Education at the November meeting of the American Academy of Religion; wrote an essay, “Forgiveness as a Virtue in the Practice of Religious Ethical Mediation,” read at the Society of Christian Ethics meeting…..

12VANTAGE Spring 2007 VANTAGE Spring 2007

For the Record

In 2005, I retired from full-time parish ministry. I was invited to serve as an adjunct professor at Florida Community College in Jacksonville, leading two “World Religions” classes and two in “Introduction to Religion.” When I began teaching, I did not realize the extraordinary new ministry into which the Lord was leading me.

I continue to rejoice at the incredible hunger for God and the things of God I have found among my students...Each day I marvel at the searching for God...from those students who practice some type of faith, and from those who seek to find faith. My joy has been to lead them in this search....

I am not now nor have I ever been much of an evangelical, and yet in this teach-ing ministry I am an evangelical. I lead my students to see that the revelation of God is much broader than they could have ever imagined, that God is revealed in all the great religions of the world, and that the great religions have more in common than they have ever recognized...

...God dances with us in life, leading us into ever deepening and diverse ministries to serve the purpose of God. The college is now my parish, and I rejoice.

R I C H A R D M . T U R K (D.Min.’02) | Retired rectorSt. Andrews Episcopal Church | Jacksonville, FL

Page 13: Vantage Spring 07

13VANTAGE Spring 2007 VANTAGE Spring 2007

Li f e Lo n g

Le a r n i n g ev e n t s

March 9–10 YMLi Soul Tending: Finding Spirituality in Your Ministry. offered in conjunction with the youth Ministry Certificate. occasional students are welcome. Leader: Anne H.K. Apple, parish associate at Idlewild Presbyterian Church, Memphis Presbytery. Facilitated by Neema Cyrus-Franklin and Sarah Erickson. Program fee: $150 (includes two meals; housing available for an additional cost).

March 11–16Certificate in Spiritual Formation—Psalms: The Gospel in a nutshell. An exploration of the Psalms as a pastoral resource and consideration of ways the Psalms interface with public issues and call us out beyond all that is conventional in faith. Leader: Walter Brueggemann. Program fee: $350

March 18–22Contemplative Retreat for Women. At the Benedictine Spirituality and Conference Center, Sacred Heart Monastery, Cullman, AL. Leader: Carol Byrd. Program fee: $275 (includes housing and meals)

March 19–20St. Andrew Presbytery Event. open to members of the Presbytery of St. Andrew; this event takes place in the fall and spring at Camp Hopewell. Leader: Beth Johnson

April 16–18Colloquium—Word for a Warming World: The Bible, the Church, and the Groanings of Creation. See ad on page 4. For additional information and to register, contact Barbara Poe, [email protected] in the seminary’s office of Alumni/ae Relations.

April 22–27immersion Experience: An invitation to a Deeper Spiritual Life. This course is the starting place for the Certificate in Spiritual Formation. occasional students are welcome. Leaders: CTS Faculty. Program fee: $400

April 30–May 4Guthrie Scholars. CTS Alumni/ae Class of 1992. The Guthrie Scholars Program is offered twice a year: in the spring, for alumni/ae only; in the fall, open enrollment. The seminary covers all costs, except travel. For more information, go to www.ctsnet.edu > Lifelong Learning > Continuing Education.

May 4–5YMLi Because the Bible Tells Me So: Putting the Bible Back in Bible Study. one of the courses in youth Leadership Ministry Initiative certificate program. occasional students are welcome. Leaders: Beth Johnson, Bill Brown, and Jennifer Williams Wilson. Please bring a Bible (NRSV preferred). Program fee: $150 (includes two meals)

May 6–11Contemplative Retreat for Men. At the Monastery of the Holy Spirit, Conyers, GA. Enrollment limited to 20 individuals. Leader: David Guthrie. Program fee: $350 (includes housing and meals)

May 20–24Faith(s) and Foreign Affairs. Travel seminar to the U.N. and New york City. Leaders: Mark Douglas, Kim Clayton Richter, and staff of the Presbyterian UN office. Enrollment limited to 18. Program fee: $950 (includes tours, Broadway show, accommodations, some meals; airfare and most ground transportation extra). See article on p. 14.

May 29–June 2Evangelism in Ministry: So What is the Good news, Anyway? Thompson Scholars event. Leader: Steve Hayner. All-inclusive program fee (housing at Holiday Inn and meals): double room – $150; single – $290. Register by April 1. Details online at www.ctsnet.edu > Lifelong Learning > Courses and Events. Click May 29 on the calendar.

June 11–13Above & Beyond: Hearing the Call of Jonah & Ruth. (Presbyterian Women’s Bible Study Training). Leader: Joyce MacKichan Walker. Program Fee: $90 includes lunch. Also offered August 3-4 and August 24-25 on campus; August 20-24 at Roswell Presbyterian Church. See article on page 14.

For more information about the courses listed below and to download a registration form, go to www.ctsnet.edu/lifelong/calendar/index.asp.

For additional information contact Pat Roper, registrar, at 404-687-4587, or [email protected]. Unless indicated otherwise, all events are on the seminary campus in Decatur, GA.

Richard Blake, public services librarian, leads the theology and literature discussion group in Lifelong Learning; attended the SBL/AAR Annual Conference in Washington, DC; preached at the Chinese Community Church in New york City on December 31, 2006, with translation provided by his wife, Weishiuan Chen (Sandy Blake)…..Sarah Erickson, associate director of Lifelong Learning, led a confirmation retreat, “In-town and Interfaith,” for North Decatur Presbyterian Church, and shared a program “Tips and Tools for Evaluating Music in Educational Ministry” for the monthly meeting of the educator group hosted by the Presbytery of Greater Atlanta…..Walter Brueggemann, professor emeritus, addressed the Conference of the Association for Clinical Pastoral Education, Care and Counseling Center of Georgia in Tampa, FL; was the “McClendon Scholar-in-Residence” at New york Avenue Presbyterian Church, Washington, DC; lectured at St. Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church, Dallas, TX; received an award citation of the Committee for the Scientific Examination of Religion at the University of California at Davis; published The Theology of the Book of Jeremiah (old Testament Theology; New york: Cambridge University Press, 2007) and Mandate to Difference: An Invitation to the Contemporary Church (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2007); published “An Indispensable Upstream Word: The Gift of Prophecy,” Reflections yale Divinity School 93:1 (Winter 2006)…..Barbara Brown Taylor, adjunct professor of Christian spirituality, preached at Harvard, yale, and Princeton universities during the fall semester; participated in two panels at the annual meeting of the Society of Biblical Literature in Washington, DC. Her most recent book, Leaving Church, received the 2006 award for Best General Interest Book from the Association of Theological Booksellers; led a week-long writing workshop with memoirist Nora Gallagher at Mount Calvary monastery and retreat house in Santa Barbara, CA…..Steve Hayner, Peachtree Associate Professor of Evangelism and Church Growth, was the conference plenary speaker for the Association of Presbyterian Mission Pastors in Louisville, Ky; hosted the “Pastors and Church Leaders’ Track” at Urbana 06 Student Missions Conference in St. Louis, Mo; was the discussion moderator for the seminar “Searching for God Knows What” at the Montreat College Conference, Montreat, NC.

StudentsMike Manaugh ’07 is teaching the confirmation class at John Knox Presbyterian in Marietta, GA…..Sheena Mayrant ’07 is doing a yearlong internship with AMIS, Inc. (Atlanta Ministry with International Students) under the supervision of Fahed Abu-Akel ’74 at Peachtree Presbyterian Church, Atlanta, GA .....Reggie Weaver ‘07 has been invited to preach at the Montreat Conference Center on June 3. He will be the first preacher in Montreat’s nationally recognized Summer Worship Series.

TransitionsThanks!Golden Griffieth, who has worked in the maintenance department for 14 years, received the Betsy Burgess Staff Award “for faithfulness, dedicated service, and Christian character upholding the seminary’s purpose and mission.” He is among the first to arrive on campus each morning, making sure that facilities are ready, and with his quiet, friendly greeting, he is an inspiration to us all.

Welcome (back)!Chip Carter has returned to the Atlanta area and to the seminary as support technician for information technology. He had served in that position for two and one-half years before moving last year to West Virginia.

Susan Thomas ’05 has been named staff associate in Lifelong Learning, where she had been working in a part-time capacity. She has also served as staff associate in the office of Communications.

GodspeedCongratulations—and Godspeed—to John Knapp (MATS ’95) and the entire staff of The Southern Institute of Business and Professional Ethics, who have moved to their new offices at Georgia State University. Late last year, the institute became part of the university’s J. Mack Robinson College of Business. Since 1996, Columbia had provided office space and other services at no cost to the institute. In addition, the seminary had been a supportive partner in the development and production of many of its programs and educational resources.

Page 14: Vantage Spring 07

14VANTAGE Spring 2007 VANTAGE Spring 2007

Li f e Lo n g

Le a r n i n g ev e n t s

Spring Retreats at MonasteriesThe Center for Lifelong Learning is offering two contemplative retreats at monasteries this spring – one retreat for women and one for men.

For women, a five-day retreat will be led by Carol Byrd at the Benedictine Spirituality and Conference Center, Sacred Heart Monastery in Cullman, AL (between Birmingham and Huntsville), March 18-22. The $275 program fee includes housing and meals. Please call 404-687-4562 to see if space is still available.

For men, a six-day retreat will be led by David Guthrie, at the Monastery of the Holy Spirit in Conyers, GA, May 6-11. Enrollment is limited to 20 people. The $350 program fee includes housing and meals. Deadline to register is April 6.

To register for a retreat, go to www.ctsnet.edu/lifelong/calendar/index.asp Then click on the date of the event on the calendar.

Four More Courses This Year

Youth Ministry Leadership Initiative A partnership between the Presbytery of Greater Atlanta and Columbia Seminary, the youth Ministry Leadership Initiative (yMLI), offers a youth ministry certification program. The program is designed for lay leaders and pastors who are committed to developing strong programs for youth within churches. yMLI will offer four more courses in the certification program this year at Columbia Theological Seminary:

May 4–5Because the Bible Tells Me So: Putting the Bible Back in Bible Study, with by Beth Johnson, Bill Brown, and Jennifer Williams Wilson. The $150 program fee includes two meals.

August 24–25How Presbyterians Talk About God: Theology and Polity, with Martha Moore-Keish and David Forney. The $150 program fee includes two meals.

october 5–7YMLi Beginning Retreat, with Rodger Nishioka and Neema Cyrus-Franklin. The $150 program fee includes two meals. This weekend will allow participants to ask important questions about their particular call to youth ministry and youth ministry as a whole.

December 7–8Know Where to Turn When the Youth Turn to You, led by experienced professionals in the fields of youth development and counseling. This course will focus on practical pastoral care with youth and families. The $150 program fee includes two meals.

occasional students who do not wish to complete the full certification program are welcome to register for courses. For registration details, see the Lifelong Learning calendar on page 13.

new York City and the u.n.

Faith(s) and Foreign Affairs, May 20-24

The Center for Lifelong Learning is offering a seminar at the United Nations and in New york City May 20-24, 2007. Participants will also visit Ground Zero and St. Paul’s Chapel, used as a respite center for workers and volunteers involved in the recovery effort following the tragic events of September 11. The seminar package also includes a tour of the new Museum of Biblical Art and tickets to a Broadway show.

Cost of the trip is $950, which includes four nights’ accommodations at the Crowne Plaza New york City at the United Nations (double occupancy only), daily breakfasts, and two lunches. other meals, most ground transportation, and airfare are not included. Participants make their own flight reservations on the airline of their choice and join the group in New york at the hotel.

Hosts for the seminar are Mark Douglas, associate professor of Christian ethics, and Kim Clayton Richter, interim director for Lifelong Learning events, in coordination with the staff of the Presbyterian United Nations office (PUNo).

Registration is limited to 18 participants. A brochure, with registration form, is available online at www.ctsnet.edu > What’s new. you may also register online at www.ctsnet.edu/lifelong/calendar/index (then click on May 20). or call 404-687-4587.

Walter Brueggemann Leading Summer Scholars Program

old Testament scholar Walter Brueggeman will lead this year’s Summer Scholars program, July 23-25 on the seminary campus. Called “An Invitation to the Contemporary Church: opening ourselves to Wonder/Practicing Risky Faith,” Brueggemann’s course will offer insights, challenges, and hopeful directions for the church (and congregations) seeking to live the faith with courage in this tumultuous time.

Based on his new book, Mandate to Difference: An Invitation to the Contemporary Church, Brueggemann’s presentations will focus on the biblical witness and theological claims that call us out of fear and desire for safety into awe, wonder, and daring discipleship.

This conference is for all persons —clergy, educators, and laity—who are concerned with the church’s witness and work today. For more information, go to www.ctsnet.edu/lifelong/calendar/index.asp Then go to the date of the event.

Preparing to Teach the Horizon Bible Study Course

Hearing God’s Call in Jonah and Ruth

“The Book of Jonah is not just a fish story, nor is the Book of Ruth simply a Cinderella tale,” says Carol

Bechtel, old Testament scholar at Western Theological Seminary in Holland, MI. “Both these old Testament stories offer us insight into what it means to hear and to heed God’s call.” Bechtel is author of the 2007-2008 Horizons Bible study course, Above & Beyond: Hearing god’s Call in Jonah and Ruth.

At first glance, Jonah and Ruth might seem to be an “odd couple,” Bechtel says. “After all, their main characters couldn’t be more different. But these books have more in common than meets the eye. With their shared fascination with foreigners and their openness to God’s love of foreigners, these stories speak to our own age, with its fear of foreigners. They offer us an opportunity to examine our fears together and broaden our minds a bit.

“Both bear witness to a God whose love will not let us go. And both call us to a deeper commitment of faith—a faith in which we serve God by loving others above and beyond the call of duty.”

The Center for Lifelong Learning will offer a study of this course four times this summer—a weekday course and two weekend courses on the seminary campus, and a weekday course at Roswell Presbyterian Church, in Roswell, GA.

Participants will explore the biblical texts, make personal connections with the themes, and receive practical ideas for teaching this series.

For dates, leaders, program fees, and how to register, see the Lifelong Learning calendar on page 13.

Page 15: Vantage Spring 07

Currently available from the CTS Bookstore

no. oF CoPiES RETAiL PRiCE CoLuMBiA PRiCE Prices subject to change

CoLLoquiuM SPEAKERS

Terence Fretheim god and World in the Old Testament: A Relational Theology of Creation $29.00 $24.65

Exodus. Interpretation Commentary Series. $29.95 $25.50

Barbara Rossing The Rapture Exposed: The Message of Hope in the Book of Revelation $15.00 $12.75

Barbara Brown Taylor Leaving Church: A Memoir of Faith $23.95 $20.40

nEW PuBLiCATionS BY FACuLTY

Anna Carter Florence Preaching as Testimony $24.95 $21.25

Walter Brueggemann The Theology of the Book of Jeremiah $19.00 (paperback); $50.00 (hardcover)

Mandate to Difference: An Invitation to the Contemporary Church $19.95 $17.00

ToTAL AMounT FoR BooKS

SHiPPinG AnD HAnDLinG: orders under $20, add $4.50;orders from $20 to $49.99, add $6; orders $50 and over, add $7.50.

Add $1 for residential deliveries.

All books shipped United Parcel Service.Georgia residents: add seven percent (7%) sales tax on books and shipping.

ToTAL DuE

METHoD oF PAYMEnT (Please check one):

o Check payable to CTS Bookstore (included with order) o Visa o MasterCard o Discover

Please print information below:

Visa/MasterCard/Discover # Exp. Date Name (as it appears on card)

Street address for UPS delivery

City State Zip Telephone

Please send this completed form to:CTS Bookstore, P.o. Box 520, Decatur, GA 30031 | Fax 404-687-4658 | E-mail [email protected]

15VANTAGE Spring 2007 VANTAGE Spring 2007

Vantage (uSPS 124-160)vol. 98, no. 3, Spring 2007Published quarterly by Columbia Theological SeminaryPeriodicals postage paid atDecatur, GACirculation: 13,000

The office of institutional Advancement

Editor: Genie Addleton

Assistant Editors: John Clark, Sarah Chamberlain ’08, Karen Fleming ’08

Design: Lucy KeCover Design: Amy Baer ’08

C o n T R i B u To R SJohn Bell ’88Erskine Clarke ’66Sarah Walker Cleaveland ’07 Lee Carroll ’68 Julie Cline ’95 Sophie CrosbyJohn Daniels ’90Kathy Dawson ’94Sarah Erickson ’03Jane GleimJudy GravesRay Guterman ’80Robert Hay ’84Judy HightowerRon KerrJulie Lehman ’92Kim Levert ’04Cheryl Mack ’05Al Masters ’76 (D.Min.’91)nelda MaysLaura MendenhallLinda MooreMichael MorganLinda Morningstar (MATS ’98)Jami MossMarissa Myers ’08 Barbara PoeKim Clayton Richter ’84Billy Robinson ’97Tom Roddy ’61 (D.Min.’84)Linda SaboJody SaulsJack Taylor ’62Susan Thomas ’04Richard M. Turk (D.Min.’02)

Postmaster:Send address changes toVantageColumbia Theological SeminaryP.o. Box 520Decatur, GA 30031-0520

Correction The topic of the Thompson Scholars Program, May 29–June 2, is Evangelism in Ministry: So What Is the Good News, Anyway?, not good News at the Margin, as reported in the winter issue. For more information, go to www.ctsnet.edu/lifelong/calendar/index.asp. Then go to the date of the event.

Apply by April 1!

Apply by April 20 for S3 Project FundingIn four years, the S3 Project has grown to include more than 200 clergy, educators, and church leaders. Funded with a $1.3 million grant from the Lilly Endowment, the project offers opportunities for pastors of all denominations, working in peer learning groups, to develop models for sustaining excellence in the practice of ministry. This will be the final year of the S3 program as administered under the current grant, which is one of only 63 “Sustaining Pastoral Excellence” grants awarded by the Lilly Endowment in 2003. Three other seminaries of the Presbyterian Church (USA) also received grants.

Columbia’s S3 Project awards participants $1,000 each per year for two years to fund self-directed group work that focuses on aspects of Sabbath, study, and service. Each participant may receive up to $300 in need-based aid for travel to the program orientation and subsequent annual meetings, held each August. Applications for funding are due April 20. Groups will be notified of acceptance by mid-May.

For application information, go to www.ctsnet.edu >Lifelong Learning >Continuing Education. or contact Sarah Erickson (404-687-4526 or [email protected]).

Before and After: Letters about Mary’s PlaceS3 “service” for Terry Hart and the 11 other members of her S3 Project group includes an ongoing relationship with Mary’s Place and the Church of Mary Magdalene, a Seattle ministry for homeless women. Last year, group members visited the ministry three at a time to learn about the program and lay the groundwork for future ministry. Hart, who is pastor of First Presbyterian Church, Tulia, TX, wrote letters to her congregation about her experience. you can read those letters and learn more about this S3 group on the Web site of the Sustaining Pastoral Excellence program: www.divinity.duke.edu/programs/spe/articles/200612/mary.html

$1.00

Page 16: Vantage Spring 07

VA N TAG ESpriNG 2007

P.O. Box 520Decatur, GA 30031404-378-8821www.ctsnet.edu

ContentsPresident’s message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2Montreat Lectures: Religion and the South . . . . . . . . . 2Class of 2006 placements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3New trustees appointed to board . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3Ca r i n g f o r Cr e at i o n . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4

Julie Lehman ’92 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4Billy Robinson ’97 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5Julie Cline ’95 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6Richard Cushman ’65 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6Kathy Dawson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7Ray Guterman ’80 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7Al Masters ’76 (D.Min. ’91) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7Sarah Walker Cleaveland ’07 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Robert Hay ’84 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8Earth Covenant Ministry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8Tom Roddy ’61 (D.Min. ’84) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

Retirement Tribute: Brian Wren . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10For the record . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11Lifelong Learning events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13From the bookstore . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15

periodicalspostage paid atDecatur, GApublication No.124160

Whenever environmental issues come up within the

church, we often discuss them in terms of stewardship:

How can we be “good stewards” of the natural resources

God has given us? the same question also emerges

whenever we talk about money: How can we be “good

stewards” of the blessings God has provided?

these questions are not as straightforward as they

may seem. We jokingly say we are being “good stewards”

when we use the back of envelopes for scrap paper and

refuse to throw away worn-out clothes, but this notion

of stewardship is incomplete.

the good steward does not hoard resources for

the sake of preserving and storing them away. the good

steward preserves resources to enable generosity and

create abundance. If you want to consider what happens

to those who merely hoard what they have been given,

look at the parable of the talents (Matthew 25:14 – 30).

Here Jesus shows us that gifts are useless when we

squirrel them away. In contrast to the worthless servant

who buries the master’s talent (money), the good

servants take the talents they are given, trade them, and

make more. And—perhaps most importantly—they give

them back.

the same is true of our natural resources. Yes, it’s

important to preserve what God has provided, but the

point is to enable and create abundance for the future—

so that our children and grandchildren will be able to

enjoy God’s gifts as we have.

And the same is true of our money. With the

Columbia Annual Fund, the seminary lives out this

principle every day. We receive gifts from alumni/ae and

others who are committed to Columbia’s mission to

prepare leaders for Christ’s church—and then we pour

those gifts into our students to make sure that they are

prepared for ministry in the years ahead.

As you consider the opportunities you have to be a

good steward of God’s blessings, please consider a gift to

the Columbia Annual Fund.

The Challenge

When you make a gift to

the Columbia Annual

Fund, you can also be a

good steward of natural

resources! Save paper and

postage by making your

gift online at

www.ctsnet.edu > Supporting the Seminary

of Good Stewardship JAMI Moss WIse | Director of Annual Giving