It’s afternoon at the CALLED Convention and the bustling lunch crowd is starting to disperse. A few of the remaining wanderers pause under the bright blue CALLED banner to check today’s schedule of events. Guests who didn’t plan ahead are faced with a choice. Which of the many educational seminars will they visit this time?
Near the sleekly modern tech lab with its tasteful equipment displays, a talk on podcasting is about to begin.
Downstairs, in a spacious film screening room, Pastor Mark Tamaleaa is showing ministry videos, and sharing tips from more than two decades in youth and young adult ministry.
And just around the corner in a stately room lined with upholstered chairs, G. Alexander Bryant, president of the North American Division, is sharing lessons from the story of Paul and Barnabas. “People were afraid of Paul, but then Barnabas said ‘come on Paul. I’m not afraid of you. I’m going to help build up the gift that is in you,’” Bryant says, as latecomers file in and stand at the back of the room.
Over the course of several days, the 2022 CALLED Pastors’ Family Convention offered 135 educational seminars, with more than 25 simultaneous classes in a single afternoon. Presenters included NAD officers and department directors, health care professionals, technical innovators, pastors, and experts in a wide variety of fields. The topics were varied, but all were chosen to provide training and tools for pastors and chaplains.
The convention also hosted a series of seminars for pastors’ spouses, and created the CALLEDKids Go Fish for Kids meetings for younger children, as well as the PK Journey program for older pastors’ kids.
The NAD Ministerial Association selected a wide range of pastoral learning opportunities based on seven “core qualities of an effective pastor.” These include character, evangelism, leadership, management, relationship, scholarship, and worship. On the convention website, the ministerial team wrote that “effective pastors continually engage in equipping themselves with the current best practices of ministry.”
There were four “bootcamps” — or dedicated seminar tracks — that pastors and ministry teams could attend, either as a complete set, or mixed and matched with other topics. The four bootcamps were geared toward church planters, church revitalization, pastor evangelists, and volunteer lay pastors.
“Every church has a culture whether you like it or not. Yours does. Mine does,” said Joanne Cortes, pastor and church planter in the Washington, D.C. area, during the Pastor Evangelists’ Bootcamp. “Ask yourself: Why do we do what we do? Why does the church exist?” she said. “Does it draw people to Jesus? Does it make people feel welcome? Or is it done because it’s always been done?”
A sampling of the many outreach-based seminars included a class on ministering to the dying, led by Claudio and Pamela Consuegra, director and associate director of NAD Family Ministries; a talk on community care by W. Derrick Lea, director of Adventist Community Services; and advice for welcoming the blind community to church from Christian Record Services director Diane Thurber.
Leslie Pollard, president of Oakwood University hosted a panel discussion on ministering to people who identify as LGBTQ+ with a focus on theology, science, ethics, and relationship. “We are not going to win the [LGBTQIA+] community from a distance.” Pollard said. “That’s not Christ’s method.”
TechTalk seminars covered topics including online mission work, with digital missionary Justin Khoe, podcasting with Pastor Matthew Lucio, and social media strategy with Adventist Learning Community director Adam Fenner.
"Our presenters are experts in the field of digital discipleship, worship and evangelism practices, and we believe that their success strategies can act as a catalyst for other ministers to engage in digital evangelism,” said Rohann Wellington, tech lab supervisor, and director of the NAD Professional Services department. Wellington also gave a tech talk on digital evangelism.
A few of the varied finance-based sessions included personal finance tips from NAD treasurer Randy Robinson, a financial refresh from Michael Anthony Harpe, director of NAD Stewardship Ministries, and advice on raising funds for church projects from Michael Brown, associate director of NAD Philanthropic Services for Institutions. “A lot of times we think: ‘if this is God’s project, why do I have to ask?’ but when we think about what happened with Moses, God told him to go and ask,” Brown said.
The panel “How to Use Media for Local Evangelism,” featured a discussion with Adventist media ministry leaders Shawn Boonstra, Elizabeth Talbot, Debleaire Snell, Roy Ice, John Bradshaw, and John Geli from Voice of Prophecy, Jesus 101, Breath of Life, Faith for Today, It Is Written, and Life Talk Radio, respectively.
“One of our greatest weaknesses as a church is marketing,” said discussion moderator Maurice Valentine, outgoing vice president for media at the NAD who was recently elected to serve as a General Conference vice president. “There are literally Bible studies we do that are reaching 40,000 people a month,” he said, adding, “We need to create a place where we can report on what's happening.”
Angeline David Brauer, director of NAD Health Ministries, led a class on mental health and resilience strategies. At the seminar, Braeuer introduced Ricardo J. Whyte, M.D., and gave out copies of a workbook co-written by Whyte, Killing Burnout. Whyte used the book to guide a group discussion on resilience. “If you master your mind, you can and will master your life,” Whyte wrote in the book.
Back in the convention center, the seminars end, the meeting doors swing open, and the hallway fills up with the noise of a thousand lively conversations. The pastors, enroute to their next destination, pass once again under the bright blue banner in the hall. CALLED, it reads, in large white letters. And indeed, the men and women walking beneath it carry new books, tech, resources, and fresh ideas to take back to the places where they are called to serve.