Proclaimer Blog
Invitation to a Practical Ministry Seminar
We’re just planning our 2011 Practical Ministry Seminars. These innovative and intimate gatherings are held at The Oasts conference centre in Sussex and are a great way to stay fresh in ministry, particularly focusing on sharpening preaching skills and addressing and praying through pastoral issues. We have spaces for up to 10 men on each conference (21-24 Feb; 23-26 May; 17-20 Oct 2011). Because of the size, the seminars are also a great way to develop and deepen relationships with others in ministry.
So, here’s an idea. Why not use one of the Seminars to invite your local preaching group or fraternal? Come away together with us and get to know one another better so that you can be an effective encouragement to one another where you serve. Alternatively, you could invite a group of contemporaries with whom you don’t want to lose contact. We always have to work hard at building and keeping relationships going – and the setting of The Oasts matched with the Seminar content will be a great help in this task.
Get in contact with Rachel Brabner if you’re interested and we can help you think through how to invite friends and make the most of the opportunity. In the meantime, here’s a review from Tim Silk, who attended his first Practical Ministry Seminar last year:
What was helpful for me was the way the various ingredients were experienced together. It was great fun! The food was amazing! The people were almost normal! The focus was a robust declaration of Isaiah’s message in a broken world; and there was time to pray together. The conversation flowed between the Bible, our lives, and the different missional contexts in which we found ourselves. This was further facilitated by the evenings where we were taught from the Bible about the nature of following Jesus today.
This led on naturally to the consideration of various challenges we all faced. It was particularly helpful to be part of a group of leaders at a similar stage as it allowed us to help each other back to the heart of gospel ministry. It was a great investment of time and resources, because it allowed each of the encouraging ingredients to be experienced simultaneously, and allowed time to consider the issues. Whilst the planned input was really very helpful personally, it was the unplanned time available to talk through ministry challenges with others who had been there before that made it for me.