CHAPLAINCY IN HIGHER EDUCATION INSTITUTIONS

by Jonathan on April 2, 2012

What does chaplaincy in HE institutions look like? What questions and challenges do chaplains face in their work? What does a chaplain bring to a HE Institution? Revd Stan Brown provides us with an insight into chaplaincy in Higher Education Institutions.

Formerly the Ecumenical chaplain at Kingston University, Stan is now the Chaplaincy Officer for Education on the Connexional Team for the Methodist Church of Great Britain.

This is the fifth article published in the December 2010 edition of the Epworth Review.

Download the PDF: University Chaplaincy as Wisdom in This Place by Revd Stan Brown

{ 0 comments }

A REVOLUTIONARY SENTENCE

by Jonathan on February 22, 2012

Try inserting this sentence into your District Mission Plans, Circuit Mission Strategies, Circuit Meeting Agenda sometime soon and see where it leads you!

Local, congregation led chaplaincy is one of the most effective ways to collaborate in God’s mission in the world; local people responding to local needs over time can change the world! Discuss.

{ 0 comments }

UPDATE

by Jonathan on February 22, 2012

Hi friends!

It’s been a while since we last posted here. Partly due to all the things going on with the project. Here are some of the highlights.

1) We have been greatly encouraged by the response to the Chaplaincy Development Project over the past year. It seems to have really caught people’s imaginations! We believe with all our heart about the potential to see ‘Chaplaincy Everywhere’ and think that it can change the church and the nations.

2) We have been encouraged to get rid of the word ‘pilot’ and move into full scale project mode! You never know, ‘project’ may even be replaced by ‘programme’, though that is probably a few years down the road.

3) We are currently working with three districts to work with for the next two years. We need to find a fourth, but that will come soon. The three we are working with have so much potential, it really is an exciting time. All this is currently in process and all the paperwork etc. should be submitted by the end of March. We will know in May whether it is all systems go or time to conclude. So pray for us all in this process that God’s will is done, not just ours!

4) Meanwhile we are forming a Chaplaincy Everywhere exhibition which will tell the stories of chaplains from around the country. We are mega excited about the potential for sharing inspiring stories from chaplaincy with the church. We promise to share them here when the exhibition is ready to show to the world!

5) We are also rolling out some exciting research around the use of stories to evaluate the work we are doing. The hope is that the stories told will help to shape and form the national project as well as local chaplaincy projects we are working on.

6) If that were not enough, we are still all systems go with our local projects from this pilot year, and hope that before long we will have some exciting stories to tell from this first year… well actually 11 months and counting. We have learnt some valuable lessons over the past 11 months and will be taking them into the next stage. Thank you Southampton and Lancashire!!!

7) And, I (Jonathan) am writing a Chaplaincy Everywhere Lent Course. Yes, I am writing the sessions 3 weeks before they happen… so pray that I get all that done. We are piloting the course in a couple of places and hope to publish it for free to the whole wide world in September! It will take a small group through a process where by the end of it they are actually hatching plans for chaplaincy in their local community! Truly exciting to give the best of what we are learning away to the church for free… in the spirit of Open Source Chaplaincy!

Of course there is much more bubbling behind the scenes, exciting plans around future publicity and resources and … and… but these are some of the highlights.

Please pray for God’s grace, energy, focus, determination and all round glory to rest upon this work. It feels like the right thing at the right time and we hope that it continues to spread.

Thanks for your ongoing interest and encouragement. It is good to know that a community is growing that believes that chaplaincy is a radical response to God’s mission in the world.

{ 0 comments }

CHAPLAINCY EVERYWHERE WORDLE

by Jonathan on December 8, 2011

Wordle: Chaplaincy Everywhere

{ 0 comments }

WHERE IS THE INNOVATION IN CHAPLAINCY?

by Jonathan on December 8, 2011

Putting chaplaincy in context

It is very easy to place things in the wrong category and therefore miss what that thing truly is! I often think that chaplaincy is misplaced and therefore not seen for exactly what it is. Chaplaincy is AWESOME and should be categorised as such!

The mission of God is the context for everything. The renewal and recreation of the world, reconnecting everything through Christ. This is God’s work in the ongoing life of the universe and our lives are not only caught up in the process of renewal and reconnection but we are also called to participate in God’s mission as co labourers, collaborators, even co-conspirators.

Chaplaincy is therefore a dynamic and vigorous expression of God’s mission - it really is! Not only that, but chaplains might be described as thoughtful, reflective and grounded practitioners. That is how I have come to think of them!

The future of chaplaincy : Four themes

As I dream about future forms of chaplaincy around the United Kingdom and beyond, I see four themes emerging and I believe this is where the innovation in chaplaincy lies. From here on, I will use the language of we, because this is very much the collective dream of those who shape the Chaplaincy Development Project.

Firstly, we have the privilege of meeting chaplains all over the country who find themselves ministering in every kind of situation. We really want to honour established chaplains and chaplaincies and we want to see many more of them in the years ahead! Their stories need to be heard and the insights they share need to be taken to heart. Sadly, chaplains are often isolated from each other and from their local church community. 

We believe that one emerging theme encourages a new openness between the various disciplines of chaplaincy and seeks to synthesise our collective learning and experience. This new perspective will help the church to better respond to new opportunities as we ask the question: In the light of what we have learnt from one another, what does chaplaincy look like here? The first innovation might be describes as encouraging openness across disciplines, synthesis and responsiveness locally.

Secondly,  we want to see much much more  lay led, part time and voluntary chaplaincy. Again, this is not the end of full time paid chaplaincy, and certainly isn’t a response to the tightening of budgets. It is actually about the liberation of the church to be among people beyond the walls of our buildings! Chaplaincy is so malleable and therefore we believe that we will see more people finding a place where they might serve as a chaplain. The second innovation is therefore about the empowerment of people to participate in God’s mission within the understanding and discipline of chaplaincy.  

Thirdly, we want to see chaplaincy emerge from the heart of every congregation! Chaplaincy is a core part of what it means to be a local church in a specific place. We hope that chaplaincy will be understood as being core to Church life, not the peripheral activity of a few. We also want to encourage a culture of chaplaincy in local churches, where the minstry of chaplaincy informs the witness of every disciple of Jesus Christ wherever they find themselves! The third innovation might be described as bringing chaplaincy into the centre of Church life.

Fourthly, we want to see the various streams of chaplaincy connected at a deeper level. Where foundational skills and concepts can be shared and strengthened and where we can learn from the work of one another. We also believe that chaplaincy is done best when it is ecumenical, in other words, as an expression of the church in an area.

We also believe that a broad network of chaplaincy could benefit everyone, especially when the spirit of  open source working practices are alive and well. In other words, we share our best work with one another! In this way we hope that another future innovation of chaplaincy is both seen in collaboration and generosity.

We hope that chaplaincy will spread far and wide among the local church. We certainly believe that it is a powerful expression of the mission of God which will change the chaplain, the church and the world. Let’s spread the word about chaplaincy and engage in God’s mission!

{ 0 comments }

CHAPLAINCY IN SHEFFIELD

by Jonathan on October 24, 2011

We frequently get e-mails from people who are thinking about setting up a new chaplaincy ministry. I try to keep track of where some of those conversations lead as the stories are so often inspirational.

A few months back I chatted with Nick Waterfield who works in Parson Cross in Sheffield about chaplaincy and exciting plans to introduce a chaplaincy service into the surrounding community.

The chaplaincy service is now up and running and brimming with potential. Do check out their website and watch their own story unfold. It’s one to add to your RSS feeds and your prayer lists!

If you ever want to bounce some ideas around about chaplaincy, then always feel free to drop us a line. You never know where conversations lead. Until then, we will continue to add to this site and hopefully share some good ideas and great stories with you.

Chaplaincy in Parson Cross Blog

{ 0 comments }

A REFLECTION ON CHAPLAINCY AT ALTON COLLEGE SO FAR….

by Guest Author on October 10, 2011

Taking on the role of Multi-faith Chaplain at Alton College has been a wonderful adventure! Since I started last term, I have met a wide range of staff and students within the College, and a number of people beyond who have been kind enough to share some of their FE experiences with me. I have been working to heighten awareness of the Chaplaincy in the College, as the Chaplain is there for people of all different faiths and none, following the gospel imperative to share God’s unconditional love through word and deed. My dog collar and bright orange Chaplain’s hoodie are proving very useful! As were the scrummy GAP (Greater Alton Project) cakes that a few GAP representatives helped me to hand out to both staff and students at the end of last term, to help lift spirits after the pressures of all the external exams. Corridor pastoring with cake is definitely an effective way of reaching out!

A number of students have been coming to the weekly ‘Chox and Chat’ sessions, which became ‘Chox and Splat’ sessions over recent weeks, as the new Chaplain’s room needed a bit of brightening up, and paint splatting is too much fun to miss! We are also creating a faith tree, sharing different aspects of our faiths by hanging core ideas on the ‘tree’ in the Chaplain’s room. It is wonderful to have a Chaplain’s corner in the new Student Hub where folk can drop in as they like. Students have also begun to take up the option of booking more formal appointments with me, to help work through issues that concern them. I have also been exploring the different departments in the College with great interest! Through these types of activities I am getting to know a range of folk, and I have been encouraging them to explore their spirituality and faith, embracing the diversity that exists in our colourful community.

I was formally commissioned by Bishop Peter, Bishop of Basingstoke at the end of September, well supported by representatives of College staff and students and the GAP churches. I really appreciate all their prayers and support, and am looking forward to travelling alongside folk at the College, and seeing where the Chaplaincy will lead!

Tara Hellings
October 2011

{ 0 comments }

CHAPLAINCY FOR EVERYONE

by Jonathan on September 27, 2011

The General Secretary of the Methodist Church of Great Britain recently wrote about the ministry of chaplaincy in the Methodist Recorder. During the article, Martyn Atkins talks about the Chaplaincy Development Project and its vision to see chaplaincy everywhere.

Thanks to our friends at the Methodist Recorder for giving us permission to share the article with you!

Download the PDF: Chaplaincy For Everyone by Revd Canon Dr Martyn Atkins

{ 2 comments }

CONNECTING DISCIPLES

by Kevin on September 1, 2011

“The rewards of coming and sharing with colleagues is a great experience and I look forward each year to coming.”
The “Connecting Disciples” Conference for lay workers and childrens and youth workers takes place at High Leigh Conference Centre, March 2012. The Conference will include workshops, resources and opportunities to share and network for Chaplains.

{ 0 comments }

SUMMER CHAPLAINS?

by Kevin on August 30, 2011

What Chaplains have you come across this Summer? Perhaps on holiday? Maybe we should run a competition for the most interesting location and setting where a Chaplain can be found? Any thoughts or stories would be welcome!

This article, found in the local Cornish press, illustrates the work of Revd. Danny Reed, Chaplain to Stithians Show. Download the News Item: Stithians

{ 0 comments }