Tags
church, Episcopal Church, formation, God, gospel, history, impact, seminary, stewardship

I remember when I was a seminarian, sitting in daily worship, my eyes and mind would sometimes wander. In particular, I was fascinated by the names or other small mementos carved into the old pews. I always wondered who the mystery person was who left their mark, how long ago they carved it, and how they managed not to get caught. What I loved about those small little marks was how they made me feel connected – connected to a long line of priests and lay leaders shaped by the seminary, all with varying gifts and talents, serving God in God’s church around the world.
Last week, my seminary honored 200 years of forming priests in the Episcopal Church. Though those pews from the old chapel were lost in a fire, what struck me was the massive changes the seminary has seen. From slaves who helped build and then worked on the property, wars that shaped the context for ministry dramatically for generations, fiduciary decisions that impacted the viability and structure of the seminary, the growing diversity of the student body as the Episcopal Church’s understanding of who can be called to ministry has expanded, and an evolving physical plant that has shifted what the school on the holy hill looks like – all of that change has made for a rich and layered history, of which I am a small part.
But perhaps what speaks to me most about Virginia Theological Seminary is the ways that it also has a microcosmic impact on the church – namely, the ministry of every graduate from the seminary. My time at VTS shaped and formed me into the priest I am today – from academic formation to liturgical formation, from learnings on leadership to the development of relationships, from shaping my spirituality to shaping my sense of the wider church. And for every graduate like me, VTS has shaped thousands of others who go out into the world to preach the gospel. That reality is what inspires my financial support every year – knowing the future generations I can support.
As my church journeys into stewardship season, a time of discernment about how we will support our church financially and with our time, I am reminded of how we all come to think about the stewardship of our resources. Supporting my seminary and my church financially are ways I say to those institutions and my community that these institutions are important to me: they have made an impact in my life, and have inspired me to make an impact on the them. I would not be the priest, mother, or wife that I am without either my seminary or Hickory Neck Church. What about you? How has our church shaped your life? What stories are the stories that make you eager to be a part of financially supporting ministries of impact? I can’t wait to hear what inspires your giving!