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Nazarenes receive grant to nurture children

Nazarene Theological Seminary has received a grant of $1.25 million from Lilly Endowment Inc. to help establish Caring Nurture and Nurturing Care Through Worship and Prayer with Children, a project that seeks to develop corporate worship and prayer practices that nurture children and their faith within congregational communities of care.

The program is funded through Lilly Endowment’s Nurturing Children Through Worship and Prayer Initiative. The aim of the national initiative is to support faith-based organizations as they help children come to know and love God and grow in faith.

Lilly Endowment is making nearly $32 million in grants available to various organizations through this invitational round of the Nurturing Children initiative. The grants are funding efforts to help organizations develop new and/or enhance existing programs that support congregations as they design worship services and prayer practices that more intentionally and fully engage children.

“The generosity of Lilly Endowment Inc. enables NTS to shape the daily lives of children and adults through worship, prayer, and intergenerational engagement,” said NTS President Jeren Rowell. “But more than this, it offers a myriad of educational and academic opportunities and possibilities that will impact denominational efforts for years to come.”

NTS will focus part of its efforts on a prior collaboration with West Coast partners by engaging children in worship and prayer among diverse ethnic and immigrant congregations in Northern California. The rest of the project’s efforts will address children with autism, an area often overlooked by many faith communities, through the support of an ecumenical network of Kansas City-based churches. Each congregation will work collaboratively to develop forms of nurture sensitive to the needs of culturally diverse and neurodivergent children.

Dean Blevins, who serves as professor of Practical Theology and Christian Discipleship at NTS, explains that both approaches will utilize “design thinking,” a creative problem-solving process, to determine best practices for moving forward. As congregations work together, their observations, reflections, and data will not only provide important benchmarks but will inform future denominational conferences and training events. Blevins hopes the project’s findings will stimulate further academic study and add continued insights in the caring nurture of culturally diverse and neurodivergent children.

Nazarene Theological Seminary is one of 26 organizations taking part in the initiative. The participating organizations represent and serve congregations in a broad spectrum of Christian traditions, including Baptist, Catholic, Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), Evangelical, Lutheran, Methodist, Pentecostal, Presbyterian, Reformed and United Church of Christ, and organizations that describe themselves as nondenominational, ecumenical, and multi-denominational. Several organizations serve congregations in Black, Hispanic, and Asian traditions.

Lilly Endowment launched the Nurturing Children initiative in 2022 as part of its commitment to support efforts that enhance the vitality of Christian congregations.

To Learn more about the grant and the Lilly Endowment, click here.

Leaders include:

Bishop John F. White, 4th Episcopal District Chair, AMEC Department of Retirement Services

Bishop Harry L. Seawright, 9th Episcopal District Chair, AMEC Commission on Economic Development

Bishop Marvin C. Zanders, II, 16th Episcopal District Co-Chair, AMEC Department of Retirement Services

Dr. James F. Miller, Executive Director Department of Retirement Services

Prestigious Peace Award nominees sought

Nominate someone who exemplifies Courage, Creativity, and Consistency for the World Methodist Peace Award. Some awardees have been world figures; others may be little known beyond their immediate communities. Their stories are recorded here: https://worldmethodistcouncil.org/recipients/

Applications submitted by 15 July will be considered for this year. Any application received after 15 July will be reviewed later for 2024. All supporting documents must be included at the time of submission. The nominee should show courage in regard to physical danger or putting personal interest at risk. Creativity should include opening new initiatives and attracting others in working for the cause of peace. Consistency is judged by effort over a period of time and intensity, despite setbacks. Here is the link to read the full criteria: http://worldmethodistcouncil. org/whatwedo/world-methodist-peace-award/

The recipient receives a medallion, citation and US $1,000 which is symbolic of the larger recognition achieved in working for peace, justice and reconciliation. Their bio and photo are included in the World Methodist Council Peace Award booklet and a featured article in WMC and Wesleyan/ Methodist publications. Go to worldmethodistcouncil.org and click on the “What We Do” tab, then click on the “World Methodist Peace Award” tab to complete the online application. Please send all nomination forms to Bishop Ivan Abrahams at info@worldmethodistcouncil. org

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