What I Love About the Covenant: Part I – RELATIONSHIP
So I’m in San Jose taking a class on the “Theology of the Covenant” denomination towards my hopeful and forthcoming ordination w/ the same. There are numerous reasons I seriously love this denomination and as I ruminate on this stuff I’ll post one by one why I love this group and their distinctives. The first is RELATIONSHIP - while this is an easy cliche to fall back on, allow me to illustrate. I just now met a pastor who planted a Church w/ the PC USA in Tampa, Florida who is now coming into the ECC denom. From our convo we connected our three degrees of separation on both coasts, north and south, people we mutually know that somehow makes us more connected despite just having met. It was a great feeling of familiarity and fellowship. So without talking too much more about our distinctives, I will say that the ideas of fellowship and friendship are granted m0re weight in the ECC than just passing cliches.


I understand this book (Henri Nouwen’s Creative Ministry) in the context of the developing pastoral theologies in the latter half of the 20th century; and can place some of the socio-philosophical (and especially psychological) context from which Nouwen is writing. I was even surprised to find a slight liberationist bent in his words, “Should I remain nonviolent at all cost, or is there a time when violence might be the only ethical response?” Overall however, I find most important his central critique of “professionalism” in ministry, the disillusionment the minister experiences when our profession is placed side by side with the other helping professions, just another facet of the overall human care system. Such commoditization is perhaps what is at the root of the problem, not to mention in the current U.S. health care debates. We ministers do not want to be seen as just another commodity, just another white coat. There is something unique to what we do, transcendent, and yet we are often relegated to just another specialization. In this sense I think what Nouwen is saying here has special relevance not just for the local minister, but for the chaplain as well.
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