I am in preliminary fellowship. I’ll let my friend Rev. David explain it.
We all prepare for meeting with the MFC in our own ways. I’m
an information junkie, so doing things like studying, making lists and
timelines, and covering my study with random factoid sticky notes was my process.
I also can be guilty of an overabundance of optimism at what
I can get done in the last minute, so I wanted some sort of structured way of
preparing for this meeting. After watching an episode of Grey’s Anatomy where Torres agrees to meet
Meredith every morning to drill her for her medical boards, I looked around to
see who would be my Torres.
… and then realized that with Facebook, I had a whole
community of Torreses.
So, for six months, every Sunday or Monday, I’d ask for five
“MFC Prep Questions.” Ministers, other candidates, and lay folks would send
them on, and I’d answer one a day, Monday-Friday.
Folks would argue with my answer, and argue with each other.
Great long discussions took place not only over the 16 Competencies one must
have to become a fellowshipped UU minister, but about the very nature of
ministry itself. It was GREAT.
Some of my process, both the Facebook preparation and the
studying, was less about meeting with the MFC and more about me testing myself.
In the same way one might go on a wilderness survival trek, to push one’s
limits and endurance, I absolutely immersed myself in the competencies,
especially Unitarian Universalist history. I love our religious tradition and I
guess there was a part of me that needed to feel I worked hard, HARD, to take
my place among the ranks of those who have gone before.
I did work hard. And for myself, I feel glad of that.
And yet, too, there is something beyond all the studying
that places me in ministry. I did not receive a common question: Upon what do
you root your authority as a minister?
My answer would be that I am a Unitarian Universalist, and
thus, my authority comes from the congregation that ordains me.
But my other answer, equally true, is this: I know the exact
moment I became a minister. About 7 months after Little Wren had completed
treatment for her second cancer bout, I was down on the banks of my beloved
Pecos River. For several days, I went down to the river and cried. Sobbed. It
was as if I was completely emptying myself out.
And then, one day, I didn’t need to cry anymore. I was
emptied, I was calm, and at peace. Down at the edge of water, I received a clear
message, that I was now a minister.
A week later, now back at home, a colleague called to ask if
I could please do a memorial service.
“Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?”
Here am I. Send me.
1 comment:
There is great joy in my heart as I watch you go forth in ministry, LE. As I retire and begin a different kind of life, I am so glad that you are picking up the torch that needs new energy, new commitment, new mission zeal. UUism needs you and your love and conviction to move it forward in the years to come.
Love,
Ms. Kitty
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