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It Was OK for
Timothy
By
Kerry Gubb
e was in charge of a
congregation, and the work was challenging. He needed help, support and
knowledge if he was to serve God’s people effectively. Fortunately, he had Paul
to help him.
“Do your best to present yourself to God as one
approved, a workman who does not need to be ashamed and who correctly handles
the word of truth,” wrote the older apostle to his young colleague (2
Timothy 2:15). The King James Version says, “Study to shew thyself approved.”
It was—and is—good advice. But that word study.
Study what? Study how? Study when? Timothy had Paul. Whom do you have? Perhaps
ACCM can help you. ACCM stands for Ambassador College of Christian Ministry. You
may have seen our advertisements in this magazine. We’d like to tell you more
about it.
In the life of the
church, ministry best happens in supportive collaboration.
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The ACCM Diploma program is more vocational than academic.
It’s about doing ministry. It’s practical. Many elders, lay pastors, pastoral
teams and active members haven’t had formal education in theology and biblical
studies, so we have worked hard to create friendly, accessible grounding in
practical, real-world Christian ministry.
Choose one, a few, or all of the wide range of available
courses. You’ll surely find something to enhance your walk with God:
Scores of Christian congregations remain viable in today’s
changing world thanks to God’s grace…and the generous, selfless work of people
stepping up to the plate and filling ministry needs. Volunteers of all ages and
circumstances provide the people-power through which God works, and ACCM is
there to help equip them for service.
Made to measure
Every assignment, every piece of class work and every
exercise is crafted to be usable in the real-world service of the spiritual
communities in which our students live and share the gospel. We intend that ACCM
students are all contributors in the fellowship, however their gifting allows.
Their class work is intended to provide beneficial help “in the trenches” for
their pastors.
For the Pastoral Care course, for example, we
consult with the student’s pastoral supervisor in order to apply and adapt our
assessment criteria into individually appropriate major assignments that reflect
realistic conditions where they live. We deeply appreciate this collaboration
and opportunity to integrate our courses authentically into denominational life.
While not all the students completing Pastoral Care are actually involved
directly in pastoral care (although about half of them are), they all experience
“a day in the life”—a chance to appreciate the pastor’s role, some of the
pressures and perhaps how their own contribution might best support the edifying
of the Body in love (Ephesians 4:16).
How hard is it?
Remember, this is vocational more than academic.
In the life of the church, ministry best happens in
collaboration—multitudes of counsel, supported by a network of faithful
colleagues and mentors willing to help us better serve God’s precious children.
That’s how we plan our course work and assessments.
Students can ask, discuss, and touch up their work as often as they want. How
well they do in the course isn’t decided in a single exam. Why should it? That’s
not how healthy Christian life works.
Nobody benefits from failure, so we’ve simply eliminated
that possibility. Not in a wishy-washy manner that would devalue an ACCM
Diploma; rather, we collaborate with and mentor our students for as long as
it takes to help them succeed.Q&A, email support, time extensions or just
plain personal contact: our purpose is to help our students succeed. When they
do, we do!
Pastoral Care is primarily about a state of the
heart, demonstrated consistently over the period of the course, while
acquiring basic pastoral care skills. We’re attempting to reflect the grace
approach in the course experience. We work with you in a way that encourages:
openness to advice and instruction—a distinct absence of “I know it all”; clear
willingness to discuss and share with fellow students as “workers together with
him” (2 Corinthians 6:1); readiness, within reasonable bounds of
privacy, to discuss with fellow students one’s strengths and shortcomings—the
challenges for them in ministry; evidence of real-world consultation with and
consideration for the people being served and a heart of love for the redeemed
community into which God has placed them.
We’re confident that this would please the Master. It’s
certainly pleasing a growing number of pastoral care colleagues worldwide who
first shared their experiences and challenges in course discussion forums.
If you can relate to what you’ve read here, maybe you’d
like to consider signing up for the Diploma Program, too. All our courses are
available online for $150—just enough to cover our administrative costs.
Another student successfully
crossed the line last week with the help of ACCM, his pastoral supervisor and
some newfound, ongoing pastoral care colleagues. I find that exciting and
encouraging for both the congregation blessed to have him to serve among them.
Could
you be next?
If you would like to know more, check us out
on the web at: www.ambascol.org You’ll
find everything you need to get started in the menu.
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copyright 2008
Photo: iStockphoto.com |
Or, you can email us:
info@ambascol.org
Helpful guidance was OK for Timothy. It’ll be
OK for you, too!
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