Quick Notes Update for September 23, 2020
ZOOM WITH US THIS EVENING

Who is doing what?
As we head into the Fall season, its a good moment to check in with each other about how we are doing worship, youth and children ministry, Bible study, fellowship, outreach...JOIN US FOR AN RSMAT ZOOM CHECK IN where we can share and learn from each other.

We will use breakout groups, a Mural board and this pre-meeting survey to prepare for a meaningful hour together. Watch the survey results develop here!
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 AT 7:30PM

Save the Date: 
Tuesday, October 20, 2020
Synod of the Mid-Atlantics 2020 Vision Report Processing Webinar
7 PM

This webinar is being hosted by NBTS and the Synod of the Mid-Atlantics. It is a time for church leaders to hear from 2020 Vision Team members, ask questions, and discuss the recommendations being made by the 2020 Vision Team to the 2021 General Synod.

ZOOM BASED TRAINING FROM
CHURCH BASED MENTAL HEALTH
Trauma Informed Care for Socially Engaged Communities

Free Zoom Training: Save the Dates 
Church Based Mental Health Services is pleased to sponsor two workshops on Trauma Informed Care for professional staff and non-professional volunteers on October 7th and October 14th from 9:30am to 11:30am. Please RSVP to Carol Turner at cjteddpc@mac.com to reserve a place. Zoom links for both workshops will be released 24hours before each event.  

Trauma Informed Care for Socially Engaged Communities
Providing trauma informed care is no longer optional in this world where traumatic events are happening all around us. It is a necessary approach that operates under the principle that those we seek to help, and those of us who help, are all impacted by trauma in some way. This two-part training will educate participants about trauma and the impact it has on thoughts, emotions and the body, and offer basic trauma-attuned relational, clinical and self-care skills that are necessary to work with culturally diverse populations. Workshop on October 7th will focus on deepening our understanding of Trauma and the workshop on October 14th will focus on applying this understanding in our work settings. 

More About Our Presenter
Debra Ruisard holds an MSW and DSW from Rutgers University. She is the Project Director, SAMHSA-NCTSN Grant and Senior Trainer at The CTARI Institute at The Center for Great Expectations, a non-profit agency in Somerset, NJ that provides trauma informed residential, outpatient and in-home treatment to individuals who struggle with mental health and substance use issues. She is also a Trainer for CGE’s CTARI Institute. Dually licensed as an LCSW and LCADC, she has extensive clinical experience in simultaneously treating trauma and addiction issues with adolescents and adults. Dr. Ruisard is a Part Time Lecturer at the Rutgers School of Social Work and has a private practice at Ivy Counseling Group in Skillman, NJ. 

More About Our Format
RSVP is required to access Zoom link and password for both workshops. Meetings start promptly at 9:30am with a featured presentation, followed by ten- minute break. Small breakout discussion groups (with a designated group facilitator and focused questions for discussion) begin promptly at 10:30am and report back to the group as a whole by 11:00am.
Workshops end promptly no later than 11:30am. Additional questions or concerns can be addressed to Carol Turner at cjteddpc@mac.com.
UNDERSTANDING THEOLOGICAL EDUCATION IN THE RCA
In the Reformed Church Center’s second Understanding Theological Education in the RCA colloquy, reflecting on what theological education has been in the RCA and what it could be, we look inward, at this, the oldest Protestant theological seminary in North America. Forty-five years ago, NBTS had a mostly white, almost exclusively male student body, with a white, male faculty. Thirty-five years ago, it was still a majority white school, and the main educational program occurring during bankers’ hours. Twenty-five years ago, it was still a school that taught RCA ministers and welcomed people from other traditions. Today, the vast majority of students are people of color, most classes meet at night or on weekends, and the RCA is a minority denominational group among students studying in several different programs. 
 
New Brunswick Theological Seminary has been on the growing edge of theological education ever since its founding in 1784. Life on the growing edge comes with challenges, even though those challenges may change from time to time. The theme for our colloquy on October 20 at 12:00 noon will be Changing Challenges at New Brunswick Theological Seminary. We will begin with presentations by two former presidents of NBTS and one former dean, and spend the rest of the hour in questions and discussion. 
 
Robert A. White served as NBTS President, 1985-92. Prior to that he served Reformed churches in Clover Hill, New Jersey, and North Syracuse, New York.  In 1980, he was appointed RCA Minister for Social Witness, directing denominational programs in peacemaking, US-Soviet church relations and global justice. He was called to be Senior Minister of the First Reformed Church of Schenectady, NY in 1992 and designated Minister Emeritus in 2006. He then served as Interfaith Chaplain at Bethesda House of Schenectady, an inner-city ministry to the homeless and working poor, and as Interim Executive Director of the NY State Council of Churches.  A graduate of Hope College and Western Theological Seminary who pursued graduate studies at Union Seminary in New York, Columbia University, and Rutgers University, Dr. White and his wife JoAnne now enjoy retirement in a log cabin on Peck Lake in the southern Adirondack Mountains of New York. 
 
A native of South Holland, Illinois, Norman Kansfield, president of NBTS from 1993 to 2005, holds degrees from Hope College, Western Theological Seminary, Union Theological Seminary in New York, and the University of Chicago. Norm began his ministry within the RCA in Astoria, Queens, New York, and continued in the Chicago suburbs of Berwyn and Riverdale, Illinois. He was the seminary librarian and a faculty member at Western Theological Seminary and at the Colgate Rochester Divinity School/Bexley Hall/Crozer Theological Seminary and St. Bernard's Institute in Rochester, New York, before coming to NBTS. Since 2005, he has served first as Senior Scholar in Residence at the Theological School of Drew University and currently as Theologian for the Zion United Church of Christ in Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania. He and his wife, Mary Klein Kansfield, live in East Stroudsburg, 
 
Renée House is the Minister of the Old Dutch Church in Kingston, New York where she has served since March of 2013. Prior to accepting the call to Old Dutch, she served on the faculty of NBTS for twenty-five years as Director of the Library, Academic Dean, and Professor of Practical Theology, and as a General Synod Professor of Theology. Renée received her M.L.S. from the University of Arizona, M.Div. from NBTS, and Ph. D. from Princeton Theological Seminary. As a minister in the RCA, she has been engaged in ministry throughout the U.S. as well as Taiwan. She is a writer, poet, singer, wife, stepmom, and grandmother to six rambunctious kids. 
 
There is no charge for taking part in this colloquy, but all participants must register at 



There will be three more programs in this series during 2020-21:

·    November 17, on Women in Theological Education, with Lynn Japinga and Liz Testa.

·    January 19, on the Ministerial Formation Certification Agency, with Cor Kors.

·    February 23, on Certifying Fitness for Ministry, with Carol Bechtel, Micah McCreary, and Felix Theonugraha.
PENTECOSTAL ACTIVITY
Strange happenings at Ponds Reformed! Watch this video they prepared for Pentecost 2020.
(8 min)

Churches in our Regional Synod are participating in Churches Learning Change. Read some testimonials from Wyckoff Reformed about the impact on their church life.
CHURCH BASED MENTAL HEALTH NEWSLETTERS ARCHIVE
We've created an online gathering of all of the newsletters the program has sent out during COVID. Very helpful insights to pass along to your congregations!
The information and materials that appear in the email newsletter, facebook page or on the Website of the Regional Synod of the Mid-Atlantics of the Reformed Church in America ARE NOT NECESSARILY THE OPINION OF THE REGIONAL SYNOD OF THE MID-ATLANTICS OF THE REFORMED CHURCH IN AMERICA, NOR ARE SUCH NECESSARILY ENDORSED BY THE REGIONAL SYNOD. THE ACCURACY AND VALIDITY OF THE INFORMATION IS THE RESPONSIBILITY OF THE PROVIDER OR AUTHOR.