Postcolonialism and the Missional Future of the Church - 2010 Emergent Village Theological Conversation

Announcing
The 2010 Emergent Village Theological Conversation
Postcolonialism and the Missional Future of the Church
November 1-3, 2010
Atlanta, GA
First Presbyterian Church

Featuring the following speakers:

Musa Dube
Musa Dube

Musa Dube, Professor of New Testament at the University of Botswana and author of “A Postcolonial Feminist Interpretation of the Bible.”

Richard Twiss
Richard Twiss

Richard Twiss is a member of the Rosebud Lakota/Sioux Tribe and the author of “One Church, Many Tribes.” He is the President of Wiconi International.

Colin Greene
Colin Greene

Colin Greene is the Head of Theology and Mission Development for SGMLifewords in the UK. He is the author of “Metavista: Bible, Church and Mission in an Age of Imagination.”

Join us at TransFORM: East Coast Gathering

TransFORM: East Coast Gathering

TransFORM East Coast Gathering - Please RSVP Now!

What Is TransFORM? | Speakers/Workshop Facilitators | Cost/Registration | Schedule
Lodging | Airport | Watch Online | Sponsors

 

We are gathering missional practitioners on the East Coast to learn from each other and to mobilize others for forming new missional communities.

Whether you’re a pastor, prospective "church planter," or simply interested in finding out more about transformational missional communities of practice, this gathering is designed to inspire and equip you to go and do likewise!

This is a FREE event, but you must RSVP to let us know you are coming! RSVP now »

*If you do not wish to join the TransFORM Network site, please RSVP using our alternate form »


SPEAKERS/WORKSHOP FACILITATORS:

Brian McLarenPeter RollinsKathy EscobarAnthony Smith

Tim ConderBecky Knight, MPHDon HeatleyPam Heatley

Phil ShepherdRich McCullenJan EdmistonJonathan Brink

Samir SelmanovicEliacin Rosario-CruzMark Van SteenwykMark Scandrette

Melvin BrayRussell RathbunAO FloresHeather Kirk-Davidoff

Mike CroghanDeanna DoanBeth NorcrossMike Stavlund

Jason MackAmy CarusoJen BurnsTodd Thomas

Rev. Vince Anderson More TBA


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COST / REGISTRATION
This is a free event. We just require that you RSVP here so that we know how many will be attending for planning purposes.


This is a FREE event, but you must RSVP to let us know you are coming! RSVP now »

*If you do not wish to join the TransFORM Network site, please RSVP using our alternate form »


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SCHEDULE

Friday, April 30
Time Session Title
9:00 AM Registration Opens / Stillness Meditation with Shinko Rick Sloan
10:15 AM Introduction: Steve Knight, Network Coordinator for TransFORM
11:00 AM Featured Speaker: Kathy Escobar of The Refuge
11:45 AM Lunch (on your own)
1:45 PM Workshops:
Constructing an Emergent Theology (Jonathan Brink)
Free For All: Rediscovering the Bible in Community (Tim Conder)
The Missional Church: What's the Attraction? (Don Heatley)
Creating an Emerging Congregation within an Established Church Community (Jan Edmiston)
Sexual Formation: Helping Individuals in Your Faith Community Be Whole People, Body and Soul (Becky Knight)
3:00 PM Coffee Break
3:30 PM Workshops:
"Nuts and Bolts" panel discussion
Simplicity: Life Planning and Money Management (Mark Scandrette)
Rethinking the Role of Artists in the Church (Lisa Cole Hawkins and Jay Smith)
Passionate Christian in a Pluralist World (Samir Selmanovic)
Pastoral Care in the Missional Church (Jeff Eddings and Jim Walker)
5:00 PM Dinner (on your own)
7:00 PM Panel discussion on different expressions of missional community
7:30 PM Featured Speaker: Peter Rollins of Ikon
9:00 PM Late Night Jam Session at Convergence with Rev. Vince Anderson and others
Saturday, May 1
7:00 AM Breakfast at Wesley (light food/coffee available) / Stillness Meditation with Shinko Rick Sloan
8:45 AM Worship
9:15 AM Featured Speaker: Anthony Smith of Mission House
10:15 AM Workshops
Sustainable Faith: Telling Stories that Compost (Melvin Bray and Russell Rathbun)
Put On Your Own Oxygen Mask First (Heather Kirk-Davidoff)
What Context Is Your Community Living In? (Phil Shepherd)
The Big Pink Elephant in the Church (Rich McCullen)
Whose DNA Is It, Anyway? (Todd Thomas)
11:45 AM Lunch (on your own)
Special: "TheOoze Volunteer Road Tour" free pizza for Ooze volunteers
1:45 PM Workshops:
Incarnational Kids: Children’s Ministry in Emerging Churches (Pam Heatley)
Organizing for Jesusistan: Lessons from the Obama Campaign’s Use of Web 2.0 (A.O. Flores)
How to Start Your Own Jesus Dojo (Mark Scandrette)
The Practices Must Support Each Other: Engineering Communities That Work (Deanna Doan and Mike Croghan)
Ministry in the Margins (panel discussion with Angela Harms, Hugh Hollowell, and others)
3:00 PM Coffee Break
3:30 PM Workshops:
"Nuts and Bolts" panel discussion
Creation: Do We Care? And If We Do, Now What? (Beth Norcross)
Seeking the Kingdom Within: A Conversation and Practice in Stillness Meditation (Mark Scandrette and Shinko Rick Sloan)
Cultivating Liberated Spaces (Eliacin Rosario-Cruz and Mark Van Steenwyk)
FAILchurch: The Downside of Risk (Mike Stavlund)
5:15 PM Featured Speaker: Brian McLaren, founding pastor of Cedar Ridge Community Church
6:00 PM Music by Harp 46
6:45 PM Closing Thoughts
Sunday, May 2
Various Times Visiting local faith communities:
Church in Bethesda
Church of the Common Table
Convergence
New Leaf Church
The Corridor
Kittamaqundi Community
Fairlington Presbyterian Church
St. John's of Baltimore City
Monday, May 3
9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Pastors' Social Media Boot Camp with Doug Pagitt (Please note: This is a separate event and costs $95 to attend.)

Schedule is subject to change. Main sessions marked by • will be livestreamed.

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LODGING
We've negotiated a special $80/night conference rate (single or double occupancy) at the following hotel:

Sleep Inn Shady Grove
2 Research Court
Rockville, MD 20850

Download reservation instructions »

There is a shuttle from the hotel to the metro (red line) which will brings you to the Tenleytown stop. Then it’s just a short walk (1 mile) or a ride on the American University shuttle and then a 5-minute walk from American University to Wesley Theological Seminary.

Note: Hotel rooms must be reserved by Sunday, February 28.



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AIRPORT
If you're flying into Washington, D.C., for this event, the best airport to fly into is Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA).


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WATCH ONLINE
We plan to livestream the main sessions of this event via our Ustream channel. More details will be posted soon, including a schedule of times.


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SPONSORED BY:

New blog coming soon « Eliacin's blog

27th Mar 2010Posted in: Blog, Personal 0
New blog coming soon

I’ve been busy obsessing and working a new theme for my blog.  I’ve been blogging for the past 10 years on and off. Some blogs have been better than others. This new season of eliacin.com would be more focus on issues of my journey to Priesthood in the Episcopal Church, liberated spaces, spirituality, alternative living, America Latina, homegrown revolution and photography.

This new theme is heavily graphic which will force me to pick up my camera more often. In 2000-2004 photography saved me from burnout. It gave me a creative outlet to my pressures from religious work, it also get me new sense of “lenses” in which I approached my surroundings. I find now myself in another season in life in which photography would not only give that creative outlet, but it would help me pay more attention to the spaces I find myself in. As an Anglican, I believe in the sacredness of place and physicality. Hopefully I’ll be able to pick up my camera as a spiritual disciple that will help become more aware of the Divine around me.

New blog coming soon « Eliacin's blog

27th Mar 2010Posted in: Blog, Personal 0
New blog coming soon

I’ve been busy obsessing and working a new theme for my blog.  I’ve been blogging for the past 10 years on and off. Some blogs have been better than others. This new season of eliacin.com would be more focus on issues of my journey to Priesthood in the Episcopal Church, liberated spaces, spirituality, alternative living, America Latina, homegrown revolution and photography.

This new theme is heavily graphic which will force me to pick up my camera more often. In 2000-2004 photography saved me from burnout. It gave me a creative outlet to my pressures from religious work, it also get me new sense of “lenses” in which I approached my surroundings. I find now myself in another season in life in which photography would not only give that creative outlet, but it would help me pay more attention to the spaces I find myself in. As an Anglican, I believe in the sacredness of place and physicality. Hopefully I’ll be able to pick up my camera as a spiritual disciple that will help become more aware of the Divine around me.

Haiti Emergency Relief Fund | One Day's Wages

On January 12, 2010, a 7.3 magnitude earthquake struck the country of Haiti, just 10 miles from the country's capital, Port-au-Prince. There have been at least 13 aftershocks with magnitudes above 5.0, according to the USGS. At least one major hospital was destroyed, and the city of Port-au-Prince is particularly vulnerable to damage due to its high population density.

Haiti ranks as one of the least developed countries in the world, and has an approximate population of 10 million,with most citizens living below $2 per day. According to the World Food Program, more than half live on less than $1 per day - in extreme global poverty. A series of major hurricanes in 2008 left the country with soaring food prices and major flood damage.

For most of us, a typical workday is just 8 hours. For the people of Haiti, their lives drastically changed in just one moment. How can we use our 8 hours of work - our One Day's Wage - to offer compassion and support to Haiti that will far outlast our workday today?

One Day's Wages has committed $5,000 from our General Giving Fund to aid in the relief efforts and we hope through our ODW network, we can raise significantly more. We're inviting the ODW community to consider donating a day's wages or any amount to the fund. 100% of donations (minus transaction costs) will go directly to the emergency and disaster relief efforts in Haiti and to support families and communities affected by the earthquake.

ODW is proud to partner with World Concern who not only have an excellent reputation for their humanitarian work, but also have a strong presence in Haiti. While we've known about World Concern, our "interview" (the night of the earthquake) and research of their work in Haiti gave us great confidence in this partnership. They have worked in Haiti since 1978 and work with about 125,000 people. The majority of their staff are local Haitians that know their people and culture. Their offices in Port Au Prince is still standing and they are doing disaster and emergency relief work right now.

ODW will keep this fund open until March 31, 2010, but will disperse funds to World Concern as each $1,000 USD is raised. As always, we'll report back to our community of donors how the funds are being used on the ground and upon availability, will provide stories, photos, and videos.

Click on the image to make a donation. Forward this to your friends. Share the link on your Facebook. 

photo from NY Times