| |
Appendix 6
Reports from Colleges
Mansfield College
Oxford Ministerial Training Course
1. The past year has been
one of great anxiety, but also of much creative thinking, for Mansfield’s
Ministerial Training Course, as we have sought to respond in a positive way to
the plans being developed by the Training Committee for the future of training
in the United Reformed Church.
2 But before I comment on
that, let me say something about the life and work of the course during the past
year. Student numbers stand at six, the same as last year. David Morgan
completed his course and in September was ordained and inducted as minister of
Trinity URC, Bromley, half-time, with a half-time chaplaincy to Bromley town
centre. At the same time we welcomed Iain McLaren from Thames North Synod to
begin his course. In addition to our six United Reformed Church students we have
once again had an Erasmus student from Bern, Michael Stähli, as part of the
ordinand group, and we expect to have another next year. However, because
Richard Howard and Caroline Vodden have been on internship, Iain has his own
house, and Jenny Mills joins us part-time on Tuesdays, there have only been
three members of the group living regularly in Wessex House, 30 Aston Street,
Lesley Moseley, Tim Searle, and Michael Stähli, and only Michael at weekends,
which means that much of the community spirit has been lost. Nevertheless, I
want to affirm that, small as it is, this is a group full of spirit,
imagination, good sense, and warm good will, whom it has been a delight and a
privilege to lead as Director and to teach as a tutor. They have worked at a
very high level of competence both on the academic side and on placement, and I
expect every one of them to serve the Church with distinction in the years
ahead.
3. There have been no
changes in teaching staff either at Mansfield or at Regent’s Park College, with
whom we work closely in the delivery of the course, since last year. At
Mansfield, Julian Templeton continues to devote half (at least!) of his working
time to Mansfield as Assistant Director alongside his ministry at Highgate,
dealing especially with placements and training in worship and preaching; and
John Muddiman and Peggy Morgan give generously of their time in their respective
fields of New Testament and World Religions and in the day-to-day supervision of
the course. I myself continue to introduce ordinands (and many others) to the
study of the Old Testament. On the governance side, we are grateful to the
Principal of Mansfield College, Dr Diana Walford, for the interest she has taken
in the course, and to John Proctor for his conscientious and indefatigable work
as Chair of the Ministerial Education and Training Committee (METC).
4. Alongside the course
for initial ministerial training we continue to admit students working full-time
and part-time for the Oxford M.Th in Applied Theology, which is suitable as an
in-service course for ministers and CRCWs at EM3 level. Martin Camroux wrote a
distinguished dissertation on church decline in the United Reformed Church and
was awarded the degree with flying colours last year. This left us with only one
United Reformed Church minister (Gerald Moule) on the course during the past
year, out of five on the course in total. However, Oxford also admits research
students in theology for the D.Phil on a part-time basis, and it is possible
that one or more United Reformed Church ministers may join us in that capacity
next year, as well as on the M.Th course.
5. During the year our
friends at Regent’s Park and other colleges in the Oxford Partnership in
Theological Education and Training have been working to develop a new degree, a
Bachelor of Ministry, which will be a purely part-time degree which will be
suitable both for ministerial education and for theological education for the
people of God in general. There may be a Master of Ministry associated with
this, which will be able to draw from a wider catchment than the M.Th. Once the
degrees are up and running, it will be possible for students to study for them
at Mansfield.
6. Staff of the course,
like those at other colleges, are always ready to lead courses and address
conferences, summer schools, etc. in their own specialities, and in this way
serve the wider church—and their more purely academic research and writing also
serves the church in its own way. I myself have led two Synod courses in
biblical study for ministers in the past two years, and would welcome further
invitations.
7. The future of the
course at Mansfield now lies in the hands of Assembly, assuming that the
proposals presented to them by the Training Committee, which as I write have not
yet been formally revealed, are as outlined to us during the year. We recognise
that if numbers of candidates continue at their present level, the United
Reformed Church will need to concentrate them more. But there will always be
some people who because of geographical constraints would not be able to receive
the benefit of a full-time course at either Cambridge or Manchester. We believe
we are well-placed to continue to offer such candidates, even in small numbers,
high-quality initial education for the ministry, and my experience in this post
has persuaded me that we can do this for people from a wider variety of
educational backgrounds than is sometimes assumed in our church.
8. However, it will be
clear, I hope, from what I have already said, that Mansfield is already offering
much more to the United Reformed Church than just a small initial ministerial
education course. Even if Assembly does decide to withdraw IME, Mansfield
College will not disappear, because it is a College of Oxford University with a
wide educational remit; and many of us at the College would wish to enable it to
continue to be a valuable, and valued, resource for the United Reformed Church.
For this reason, the METC has been working hard for the past 18 months, even
going outside its strict brief, to develop viable proposals for a fresh and
distinctive piece of work to be done for the Church by my successor as Chaplain
to the College, after I retire in a year’s time. As it would need some initial
funding from the United Reformed Church Training Committee, and I am writing in
March, it is not possible for me to say more about this at this point, but I
hope that it will be possible to talk about it at the Assembly itself.
9. At this difficult time
for Mansfield, I would value your prayers for us all: our ordinands, our staff,
our METC; and not only those involved in ministerial education, but for the
whole College, its Principal, Fellows, other staff and students. Please join me
in commending them all to the love and care of God in Christ, and to the Spirit
who leads us into new ventures for the Kingdom.
NORTHERN COLLEGE
1. ENRICHING OUR
ECUMENICAL CONTEXT
1.1 For a number of years
Northern College has been a committed member of the Partnership for Theological
Education, based at Luther King House in Manchester. We work as an integrated
staff team with three other denominational colleges offering United Reformed
Church students, alongside Methodists, Baptists, Moravians, Congregationalists
and Unitarians, shared teaching programmes that lead to University of Manchester
BA and MA degrees in Contextual Theology. The full-time BA course is taught
intensively over three days each week for two 10-week semesters to allow
participants simultaneous involvement in substantial church and community
placements all through the four years of their preparation for ministry. At the
moment we have students living and working all across the North West of England,
Yorkshire and the East and West Midlands who come into Manchester for their
teaching days. The part-time course (requiring attendance at six teaching
weekends a year) currently serves ministry students from a similar area, with
our furthest student travelling in from Rugby. However, the format of the
part-time course would clearly allow attendance by people living in many other
parts of the country, as it has previously. The full-time community work strand
(requiring six visits a year to Manchester, each for five tightly-packed days of
teaching, which are then supported by extensive community work placements close
to the student’s home) serves those who are preparing for a Church-Related
Community Work ministry. At the moment we have community work students who live
and work in the Norwich, London, Oxford, Salisbury and Newcastle areas, as well
as Manchester.
1.2 Up until now the
Church of England’s Northern Ordination Course has shared our building but
taught its own separate course. However, the Anglican ‘Hind’ process has
recently led to rapid negotiations between the Dioceses of Liverpool, Manchester
and Chester and the free churches represented in the Partnership for Theological
Education. At the moment we are seeking to develop the ‘Southern North-West
Training Partnership’ with equal numbers of Anglican and free church foundation
directors. This emerging Training Partnership is hoping to develop a new
‘Foundation Degree’ in contextual theology (validated in parallel by the
Universities of Chester and Manchester and Liverpool Hope University) that would
be offered from September 2007. This would be available to Anglican students
from the three dioceses and free church students from a much broader catchment
area. It would be taught in various centres and various modes (including
weeknight, weekend, distance learning and various full-time formats) and
increase the variety of what we could offer to all our students, including
United Reformed Church students at Northern College. It would also extend and
enrich our ecumenical context with its careful balance between three Anglican
dioceses and three main free church partner groupings.
2. EXTENDING OUR
UNITED REFORMED CHURCH INVOLVEMENT
2.1 Northern College is
an independent theological college with Congregational roots and an honourable
history of service to the United Reformed Church. Currently, its four full-time
teaching staff are all ministers of the United Reformed Church. Whilst working
in a richly ecumenical context of shared teaching in a single shared building,
we are always seeking to improve our links to and service with the wider United
Reformed Church. This last year our staff have shared in ministers’ summer
schools in the National Synod of Wales and the North West Synod in England and a
variety of one-day learning events and residential conferences for ministers,
lay preachers, local leaders, elders and others in North West, Northern, West
Midlands, South West, Eastern and Mersey Synods and have accepted invitations to
share in other events in East Midlands and Yorkshire Synods before Assembly
meets. We have also furthered our ongoing conversations about co-operation with
the Windermere Centre, Westminster College and the Scottish College, finding a
real desire for creative co-operation in each case.
2.2 At the same time we
have been seeking to improve the quality of support we give to United Reformed
Church ministers and churches who take our students for in-depth student
placements. These placements are a key component of the study experience at
Northern at every stage of our programme of education for the ministry of Word
and Sacraments and Community Work ministry. We remain very grateful to all those
who have supported our work in this way and have adjusted our support systems to
try to improve the links between college and placement supervisors. We have also
sought to improve the briefings and handbooks we offer those who do this crucial
work on our behalf.
2.3 We greatly value our
involvement in preparing students for the Church Related Community Work Ministry
of the United Reformed Church alongside our students preparing for the Ministry
of Word and Sacraments. This year we have recruited more qualified CRCWs to
teach some of our community work modules and also begun a programme where we
invite a practicing CRCW into the class in each of our community work modules so
that something of the actuality of their experience is offered at every stage of
our educational programme.
3. ENJOYING WORLD
CHURCH LINKS
3.1 We are very grateful
to both the Council for World Mission and the Belonging to the World Church
programme of the United Reformed Church for their continued support of our
policy to maintain good contact with sister denominations in other parts of the
world. During this last year four of our students have been able to visit with
churches in Zimbabwe, Uganda, Madagascar and India. One of our tutors, the Revd
Dr John Parry, also led a party of members of the United Reformed Church and the
Presbyterian Church of Taiwan to India to explore the nature of church life as a
minority community with members of the Church of North India. We have also
received students from American Samoa, Madagascar and Taiwan on our MA
programme. We have also been visited by students on placement in Wythenshawe
from Tainan Theological College and Seminary where one of our recent PhD
students, the Revd Dr Li Hau-Tiong now teaches. Visitors to the College have
included the Revd Cindy Strickler, the chaplain of Dunamis in the USA.
Opportunities for visits to places of worship of other faiths continue to be
taken, providing time for dialogue and increasing mutual understanding.
4. GREETINGS AND
FAREWELLS
4.1 This year Liz Shaw
left us in July 2005 for ordination into the United Reformed Church pastorate of
Eastcote and Northwood Hills, at the same time Gillian Heald left us for a
further year of postgraduate Biblical Studies at the University of Sheffield
prior to seeking a pastorate and in January 2006 Alison Dalton left us to be
commissioned as a Church Related Community Worker called to serve with an
ecumenical project in Poole, Dorset. We wish them all well in these new
enterprises.
The Queen’s
Foundation for Ecumenical Theological Education
1. The Queen’s
Foundation, comprising the Queen’s College, The West Midlands Ministerial
Training Course and the Research Centre, has enjoyed a buoyant, expansive year.
The overall number of those engaging in theological education has increased by
around 40%, in part as a result of new partnerships with local churches to share
the provision of adult theological education. As a Foundation we are dedicated
to excellence in theological education and formation for ministry in partnership
with our sponsoring churches – the Church of England, the Methodist Church and
the United Reformed Church. Our ecumenical and theological diversity, together
with our setting within the multi-ethnic and multi-faith city of Birmingham, and
our relationship with the University of Birmingham, provides a rich and
challenging resource for students to explore the distinctiveness of their own
tradition and identity, as well as fostering lively dialogue and deep respect
for the traditions of others.
2. The Foundation is an
active partner in the emerging West Midlands Regional Training Partnership. This
partnership is being given expression through a formal Covenant and
practitioners are beginning the task of designing new pathways and curricula for
a range of educational, ministerial and training needs. The experience of
Queen’s in offering flexible pathways in various modes – full and part-time,
residential and non-residential, helps us all in the region to be creative and
innovative in our thinking and planning.
3. The Selly Oak Centre
for Mission Studies, the successor body to the United College of the Ascension,
will be inaugurated in September this year as an integral part of the
Foundation. Four new members of staff, including one from India and one from
Southern Africa, will lead the work of the Centre, and provide mission education
and training for mission partners and students sent by world church partners.
Many will do a new MA in Mission and Leadership, and we look forward to a
vibrant, international, multi-cultural student and staff body which will greatly
enhance and enrich every aspect of ministerial education and formation at
Queen’s. The Centre is sponsored by the Methodist Church and USPG, but we hope
that this resource will be used by other partners as well, including the United
Reformed Church. The Foundation is already enriched by a range of student
exchanges with the wider world church, including exchanges with the Tamil Nadu
Theological Seminary, with churches in Port Elizabeth in South Africa, and with
the theological faculty at Leipzig. The presence of the Centre for Mission
Studies will enhance and increase the opportunity for encounter and exchange
with the world church for all students and candidates.
4. The Research Centre
flourishes with over 60 students registered with the University of Birmingham in
association with the Foundation, studying for a range of postgraduate degrees
from MA to PhD. Staff research and publications continue in the course of the
busy life of the Foundation. Mukti Barton has published Rejection, Resistance
and Racism: speaking out on racism in the Church; Paula Gooder’s study on The
Pentateuch has been reissued; John Hull has published an important response to
and critique of Mission Shaped Church; Stephen Burns has published an SCM Study
guide on Liturgy, and a Canterbury Study Guide on Living the Thanksgiving:
exploring the Eucharist; Anthony Reddie has published Acting in Solidarity:
Reflections in Critical Christianity.
5. Visiting presidents
and preachers at Foundation services lead our worship, enhance our spirituality
and deepen and challenge our faith. Worship lies at the heart of our life,
whether that is in the daily prayer that gathers those on the campus, or the
patterns of worship that sustains the community of those who learn and train
through occasional residence. In an ecumenical context we welcome the
opportunity and challenge of drawing deeply on the traditions and best practices
of each participating Church, attending to places of convergence and difference
which are often not located on denominational lines, and working hard to explore
new patterns of worship that serve churches committed to working and worshipping
ecumenically.
6. We are very conscious
that all the churches which sponsor the Foundation are engaged in searching
reviews of their training needs and their relationship to training institutions.
We realise that the United Reformed Church has hard decisions to make and that
withdrawing full-time ordination training from Queen’s is possible. We would
deeply regret such a decision as it would do fundamental damage to the
ecumenical nature of the Foundation, and would diminish the richness of
ecumenical encounter and reflection, not only for United Reformed Church
candidates, but also for Anglicans and Methodists as well. Although the cohort
of United Reformed Church candidates is small we do not believe that this is
detrimental to their formation or that it prevents their being grounded in their
denomination. On the contrary, our experience is that denominational identity is
realised and deepened in and through the encounter with others, and we regret
the pressures that are moving our churches to concentrate denominational
resources and groups as a means of securing and preserving denominational
identity. Queen’s wishes to continue to serve the United Reformed Church by
training its ordinands; we do not need or want large cohorts to do this well and
we hope that Assembly will have a bolder vision than one of withdrawal.
SCOTTISH UNITED
REFORMED & CONGREGATIONAL COLLEGE
1.INTEGRATED LEARNING
FOR THE WHOLE PEOPLE OF GOD
1.1 We believe that our
college has been in the vanguard of developing integrated learning for a wider
learning group which has ordinands at the core of that learning community but
draws in others to share in and contribute to that learning. Of course, the
creation of such wider educational cohorts responds positively to the issue of
small ordinand numbers but it would be utterly wrong to base the commitment to
integrated learning in an exercise to bolster falling ministerial candidate
numbers. The development is rooted in a much deeper conviction and commitment
– our belief that a
learning church is best created when people learning for different forms of
service learn together. This conviction shapes how we bring people together, how
we design the curriculum, how we foster learning. It encourages us to take a
less traditional view of theological education, its content, approaches and
methods.
1.2 General Assembly
adopted a policy commitment to the better integration of education for ministry
across stages 1, 2 and 3. One aspect of this is improved coherence of the
curriculum from initial to continuing education and we are organisationally set
up to comply with this, having responsibility for the synod of Scotland for all
the stages of ministerial formation.
1.3 We take this a stage
further however. It is about encouraging and facilitating the learning together
of ordinands and ministers (and indeed also with ‘non-ministerial’ learners).
The more ‘typical’ college course is becoming one where ordinands, ministers in
EM2 or EM3, lay students and adult education learners learn together, nor
separately and therefore learn from one another.
1.4 We believe that there
is no contradiction in suggesting that ordinands are both at the heart of this
community and yet other learners are not ‘fill-in’ students to make up the
numbers, for there is an organic dynamic in which each constituency makes its
own vital contribution.
1.5 For those who are
interested in numbers: we may only have four ordinands, but around 500-600
people will have attended at least one college course or event this academic
year.
2. CURRICULUM
2.1 Ordinand students
continue to pursue the relevant academic curriculum in the university at which
they are co-matriculated. Two are currently taking the taught MTh in Ministry at
Edinburgh, one an MA in Religious Studies and a further a PhD at St Andrews.
2.2. The college’s own
programme has focused on ministering with people at different stages of life and
faith (integrated with a continuing education component for ministers and others
on ministering with older people). We have worked together on issues of life and
death, not only in their pastoral and theological context, but through a series
of movies. We have explored key periods of church history and also the history
of ideas, as well as being stimulated by some literary anniversaries (from
Kierkegaard to Mrs Tiggywinkle and a theatre outing to Jane Eyre). There have
been an open monthly programme on the Seven Deadly Sins and workshops on IT. The
third term will be on community work and on the distinctive history of Scottish
Congregationalism.
2.3 This year’s college
retreat was on the theme of Looking into the Distance and brought together the
wider college community. Students are encouraged also to attend the silence and
retreats programme that the college runs in association with the synod which
this year has included a St Cecilia’s Day retreat, a programme on Tallis and
Tippett, a retreat on pictorial representations of Jesus and studies in the Book
of Ruth. We ended last session some 300 miles from Glasgow on Orkney, where we
were valedicting one of our students (the journey embraces not just the physical
distance but another cultural shift into a Scots/Norse cultural heritage!).
2.4 This year, we
continue in this vaguely Nordic direction with a study tour to Denmark where are
focus will be on such issues as the life of smaller nations, multiculturalism
post-‘the cartoons’, drugs and social exclusion, learning about Lutheranism,
alternative forms of church (including the night church at Copenhagen cathedral)
and developing learning for the whole person and whole community.
3. PARTNERSHIP
3.1 In this past year, a
key conversation has been with the Northern College in Manchester. In the coming
academic year, we anticipate making significant appropriate use of one another’s
learning resources, both of staff and in other ways. We look forward to learning
from one another’s experience and supporting one another in developments. Each
institution has its own particular strengths, expertise and emphasis to be
pooled better. We are collaborating on thinking how the church might more give
expression to its identity as a church in three nations through education for
ministry which extends across the nations.
4. ECUMENICAL
ENGAGEMENT IN SCOTLAND
4.1 We listen with
interest to the discussions in England that are leading towards the
establishment of regional training partnerships in that country and wish well
those who share in the demanding task of establishing, making work and
delivering programmes through these partnerships.
4.2 Scotland of course
sits outside those conversations, for it has its own separate ecumenical scene,
rooted in its own history and culture, with a significantly different set of
partners from south of the border and responding to the distinctive needs of
Scottish church life and society.
4.3 The College is
actively engaged in the ecumenical work that is being done here in the fields of
initial ministerial formation, continuing education and lay adult education. We
believe that we bring to those conversations and collaborative opportunities an
understanding of and sensitivity towards the particular dynamics of the Scottish
ecumenical scene that comes from the local knowledge of a Scottish institution
and have credibility for our knowledge of the Scottish context, our close
connection to the Scottish churches and for our particular expertise as
educationalists.
4.4 In the past year,
there have been significant positive developments in the Scottish ecumenical
educational scene. Following the SCIFU talks amongst the major denominations,
the United Reformed Church, the Scottish Episcopal Church and the Methodist
Church in Scotland have continued into new conversations. We are glad these
discussions have already identified education and training as one of the key
areas for work on extending ecumenical collaboration and we look forward to
being able to contribute to and support these developments, including in the key
area of initial training.
4.5 The Church of
Scotland has recently undertaken a major restructuring of its organisation. We
have already had conversations with its senior staff and welcome their
commitment to a renewed engagement of the Kirk in ecumenical educational
collaboration. In significant respects, we use similar models of initial
ministerial education with the Scottish universities as partners. The older
universities here, though not standing still, have retained a stronger
‘divinity’ emphasis than perhaps is true in other parts of the United Kingdom.
4.6 We have had for some
time a shared library with the Scottish Episcopal Church. For practical reasons,
but also in order to create a more cost-effective provision and to introduce a
more modern and professional library service, the College and the Episcopal
Church’s Theological Institute have combined our resources with those of the
existing library of the International Christian College in Glasgow. We believe
this to be a positive move in educational support terms, but also as basis for
further ecumenical collaboration in both ministerial and lay education. In the
ecumenical lay learning group, the partners are active to develop improved
collaboration in the identification and utilisation of the expertise and
experience within the member churches and to make greater use of one another’s
educational programmes.
4.7 We welcome the fresh
commitment of staff within the university schools of divinity to work more
collaboratively with the theological colleges and this year brings the first
fruits of co-sponsored events.
5. RELATING WIDER
5.1 The 2000 unification
process, which brought the ‘new’ United Reformed Church into being, affirmed as
a core principle the denomination being a “church in three nations”. This was
not merely a statement of fact, but a strong declaration of intention – to
respect the cultural distinctiveness of the two smaller nations and to
commission them to act for the whole church in their own place. It was an
affirmation of our multiculturalism, not only in relation to ethnic minorities
in the UK but in our regard for the minority nations.
5.2 This model of unity
with diversity will always be anxious, we are sure, to celebrate the distinctive
lives of Scotland and Wales alongside that of their bigger neighbour and to
foster their preservation and nurturing.
5.3 The principle is also
however a giving of responsibility to the institutions in the ‘Celtic’ nations.
The creation of the Scottish Parliament has been in parallel with and has
fostered a renaissance across a whole range of aspects of Scottish life. We are
glad for example that the Scottish Storytelling Centre, of which we are members,
has entered a new and more extended phase of its work. We seek to play our part
in this flourishing on behalf not only of the synod of Scotland but also of the
whole United Reformed Church. We believe that it is vital that education within
the United Reformed Church, including its formation of ordinands, takes
nourishment from this culture and responds to the challenges of this context.
5.4 We welcome those who
have come into the synod of Scotland from elsewhere with all the gifts and
insights they bring and play our part in their induction to Scottish life. We
believe also that it is important that there are those who are raised up and
formed within our own national context. This we affirm, even if some of them
will go on to minister outwith Scotland, taking our distinctive gifts to the
wider church.
6 Being Scottish and
serving Scotland and the church in Scotland is at the heart of our life. In
being true to that, we serve the whole church. But we want to say that we are
more than that too. A college is a college is a college… is just not true!
6.1 We also have
particular areas of expertise and interest:
-
the development of
adult learning as an area of professional expertise
-
ministry with older
people – their spirituality, their participation, their pastoral needs
-
the use of
storytelling and narrative approaches – in worship and learning, in pastoral
care and organisational life
-
the nurturing of
human resources and organisational development
-
and we hope that in
the new partnership processes for the new learning church, we might be able
more fully to offer what we have to give.
WESTMINSTER COLLEGE
1. The Cambridge
Theological Federation
1.1 Westminster College
is not a stand-alone institution but a part of a significant ecumenical
enterprise. For every minister in our own Church who is grateful for the
teaching they received at Westminster College there are now two or three people
ministering in other denominations who have an affectionate regard for our staff
and whose memories of Cambridge are located in our classrooms and our library.
Westminster College is not only the United Reformed Church’s gateway into a rich
ecumenical resource; it is a place where our contribution counts and is valued.
What is true in Cambridge is true elsewhere. Theological education has become a
significant expression of ecumenism in many parts of the country. It is not
possible for any one denomination to take strategic decisions about theological
education without the impact being felt by others. Those of us who serve the
various institutions in Cambridge share a feeling of being at the mercy of
denominational forces beyond our control. We also share a conviction that the
grace of God will enable us to overcome our ecclesial and doctrinal differences.
1.2 The planned changes
in our academic programmes, which we outlined last year, are now being put into
effect. Some of this has involved a systematic and occasionally tedious process
which enables us to meet the requirements of academic bureaucrats. What has
lightened this process is the conviction that we will be offering courses fit
for the purpose of preparing people for ministry and mission in tomorrow’s
Church. We have managed to do this without reducing the programme to a “one size
fits all” approach. Within the Federation we now offer a range of academic
courses. There are varieties of learning style and assessment. We can offer a
course for those who come into residence in Cambridge, those who come on a
part-time basis and those who live at a distance. We have programmes for
graduates and for those who come having just secured the basic academic
qualifications. Most of our Federation students have experience of another
career; a large number are married, with children; by contrast with even ten
years ago there are roughly equal numbers of men and women.
1.3 Westminster College
is one of the entry points for United Reformed Church students to all this
richness. Those who wish to follow our new BA in Christian Theology at Anglia
Ruskin University, at graduate or diploma level, may enrol through Westminster
or the Eastern Region Ministerial Course, who work closely together in the
Federation. The MA in Pastoral Theology is similarly available. Those who wish
to follow the Cambridge University course leading to a degree of Bachelor of
Theology in Ministry need to live in Cambridge and be linked to the university
through Westminster. The new arrangements will make it possible, we believe, for
all ministerial candidates to graduate in relevant disciplines. We believe that
the Church is right to demand academic qualifications for the ministry of Word
and Sacrament; we also believe that gifts and graces which are not subject to
academic assessment are essential.
2. The wider United
Reformed Church
2.1 The whole college
community has been exercised by the uncertainties created by the review of
training. Whatever assurances are given, all those who are employed in church
institutions, whether they be colleges, synods or the staff of General Assembly,
are unsettled by major reviews. Nor is it the United Reformed Church General
Assembly alone, which commissions radical reviews of its procedures and
institutions only to reject the conclusions of those who have conscientiously
devoted their time and imagination to coherent proposals. This happens in all
denominations and public bodies. Westminster College finds itself in double
jeopardy. Not only is its future as a training institution dependent on review
and decision by General Assembly but when Assembly, quite properly, puts a
moratorium on General Assembly staff appointments until a review is complete,
this makes for further complications.
2.2 It is with these
kinds of considerations in mind that the Governors and the principal officers of
General Assembly have been reviewing how we manage Westminster College as a
charitable body. This is part of a general review of how charitable matters will
need to be handled in the future given the changing guidance of the Charity
Commission. At present we are considering how to build upon the changes in
college management that were made by General Assembly in 1995. Westminster
College is a registered charity with an object, modified by the United Reformed
Church Act of 1972, to provide ministerial education for the United Reformed
Church. Its trustees, the Board of Governors, are appointed by the United
Reformed Church. However, the use which the Church makes of this valuable asset
is restricted by the objects of the charity. Put bluntly, the assets of the
college are for ministerial training and cannot be realised in order to meet
shortfalls elsewhere in the Church. We are therefore exploring the possibility
of following the logic of the 1995 resolutions and making the Governors solely
responsible for running the college, in a way which is analogous to the other
colleges recognised by the Church. This would not only bring certain operational
gains but give the Governors the responsibility and freedom to consider how best
to develop the use of the college and to make alliances with other bodies.
2.3 In spite of these
legal considerations we do believe that the Training Committee plans to extend
the role of the college are eminently achievable, not least because the Church
is the most significant contributor to the current revenue of the college.
Westminster continues to be substantially committed to work with lay preachers,
TLS, continuing ministerial education, refresher courses, sabbaticals and the
DMin programme we are running in collaboration with Princeton Theological
Seminary. The popularity of our annual course for lay preachers has led us to
plan two for the coming year. Some of the TLS courses to which we contribute
take place at the college and we are glad to see some regular visitors who
regard us as friends. Our staff and students take parts in the wider life of the
Church, serving in a variety of voluntary tasks locally and nationally.
Unfortunately, the fall in student numbers and the changing patterns of study
make it impossible to provide leadership in worship for all the local churches
which make requests to us.
3. The world Church
3.1 Our students continue
to participate in programmes which take them beyond the United Kingdom. At the
beginning of this academic year one of our students visited India and another
Canada on church-related programmes. Staff have been to various parts of Europe
and the United States. The Federation resumed our study programme in Israel and
hope to go again this summer if the political situation permits. We have
received visitors from the United States, New Zealand and Europe. Two of the
staff of the Princeton Theological Seminary spent time with us and also met with
DMin students in Cambridge. In the summer of 2006 our ministers on this course
will again be travelling to New Jersey. The Federation opens up other parts of
the world to us as visitors come to our partners in Cambridge. The college has a
policy of expecting students to travel to at least one overseas placement during
their course, not only to enjoy Christian hospitality but to see how the mission
of the Church is practised in other cultures. We regard visits and visitors as
an important part of Christian formation for our own ministry.
4. The buildings
4.1 This year saw the
completion of a new en-suite facility which will meet disability requirements.
We have also upgraded the disabled lavatory provision. The Dining Hall is now
equipped with chairs rather than benches. Although sentiment argued for keeping
the benches, the needs of our current students and visitors argued for seating
which was more flexible in use and accessible. Compliance with the legislation
on asbestos in buildings required certain minor works. We have commissioned and
completed a major structural survey of the college. This not only assures us
there are no major structural problems to address but provides an agenda for
planned and costed maintenance over the next few years. We are fortunate in our
Management Committee, both in terms of the expertise and imagination which is at
the service of the college. We have retained the services of a specialist
contractor to oversee and co-ordinate work on the building in order to ensure
that it is properly specified and carried through efficiently. With the benefit
of this preparatory work we are resuming our plans for further improvements in
the facilities offered at the college.
5. The Library
5.1 We reported last year
that cataloguing of the United Reformed Church History Society collection has
passed the half-way point. It is now nearing completion and we have also
commissioned cataloguing of the rare books in the Carrie Room, which have not
been included in the on-line catalogue up to this point. Those who are
interested in browsing the catalogue on the web can do so through the University
of Cambridge Library catalogue, via the section called “Affiliated
Institutions”. Generous gifts from friends enabled us to purchase the new Oxford
Dictionary of National Biography, a small balance of the cost being met by the
college and the United Reformed Church History Society. Oxford University Press
have announced a major new publication of the papers of the Westminster Assembly
of Divines, to which we will be contributing the text of the Westminster
Confession of Faith and other documents. This will add to the requests by
scholars to visit our collections. We also anticipate new publications on Agnes
Lewis and Margaret Gibson, our benefactors, and a re-issue of the college
history. The college library remains one of the major resources of the whole
Federation and is in much demand on a daily basis. Alongside this we provide a
service for local churches researching their own history and for individuals. We
make a modest charge to those seeking help with family history, to cover our
costs. We are grateful for the continued work of Richard and Jean Potts in
sorting and classifying archives of the Presbyterian Church of England. One of
our building projects is to secure better storage space for this large
collection. We have also received a donation of the papers of Jack Newport from
his family.
6. Staffing
6.1 We welcomed Revd Neil
Thorogood, as Director of Pastoral Studies this year. He is now living in the
Thornton Close house and fully immersed in college and Federation life. Our
colleague Revd Dr Peter McEnhill has announced his intention to leave us at the
end of the academic year after serving for ten years as Doctrine teacher. Peter
has also been our Librarian, Director of the Institute of Reformed Studies and
taken responsibility for our computer network. This has been a rich ministry
with us and we wish Peter well in the next sphere of service to which he is
called.
7. Celebration
7.1 At our Commemoration
of Benefactors in 2005 our preacher was Revd Dr Walter Houston of Mansfield
College, Oxford, a former member of the Westminster staff, and the lecture was
given by Professor John Hull of Birmingham, a former student of Cheshunt
College. At a service in Emmanuel Church in November we remembered with
thanksgiving the life of Arthur Disney, who was employed by Cheshunt College in
the 1950s and who regularly attended Commemoration at Cheshunt and then
Westminster throughout his life, taking a great interest in the college and its
prosperity.
7.2 We also give thanks
for the gifts of our leavers, who were: Richard Bradley, (Hope, Denton and
Trinity, Audenshaw), Lucy Brierley, (Woking), Kay Cattell, (Marlpool and Selston),
John Cook, (Bexley, Bexleyheath and Welling), Tim Richards, (Mid-Somerset
Group), and Alison Termie, (SPACE Norristhorpe and Gomersall). Colin Harley who
left in 2004, was ordained and inducted to street chaplaincy in Poole.
|
|
|
LINKS:
General Assembly
Index
General Assembly Report 2006
If you don't have a copy of Adobe Acrobat Reader you
can download it for free clicking the button below.

|