Bridging the Political Divide

The Adult Education Committee invites you to participate in Parker Palmer’s free, 45-minute course on ChurchNext.tv between September 5 and 19.

We are in the midst of what may be the most polarizing and contentious elections in recent U.S. history. Many observers note that the political rancor and rhetoric has reached all time highs, injecting unprecedented fear, division, and unease into our culture.

How do we make sense of this? How do people of faith respond? How do we remain calm and centered amidst our difference and tension, taking our roles as peacemakers, and even prophets, seriously?

Parker_Palmer
Parker Palmer

Educator, author, and activist Parker Palmer has a few ideas. He has written extensively on faith and democracy issues. In this course, he offers thoughtful insight into how we might approach divisive political issues with grace and grit.

Register for free on the Bridging the Political Divide page at churchnext.tv.

Once registered, the course can be taken for free between September 5 and 19. It will take an average student 45 minutes to complete.


The course is made possible by the generous support of Forward Movement, The Episcopal Church, Bexley Seabury Seminary, Living Compass, and the Center for Courage & Renewal.

Adult Education – September 2016

Classes at 9:15AM in the Assembly Room unless otherwise noted.


Tolerance in an Intolerant Age:  What Should Christians Say?

John Bowlin

September 11

Can we tolerate commitments we despise, activities we consider unjust, persons and lives we find harmful or vile? We are told that tolerance is a virtue, that a liberal democracy requires a tolerant citizenry, a people who can live among differences they cannot endorse, that they might even consider abhorrent. But we worship a God of justice, truth, and love. Can we be faithful to this God while tolerating injustice and enduring falsehood? Can this response to difference bear witness to this God’s love?
John Bowlin, the Stuart Associate Prof. of Philosophy and Christian Ethics at Princeton Theological Seminary, has been a member of NPC since 2008, along with Mimi, Nicholas, and Isaac. He teaches moral theology, and started thinking about toleration after attending a cockfight in Collinsville, OK, in May of 2000.


Young Adults in Ministry

Emily Kent & Alyson Kung

September 18

Come and hear how two college graduates serving as PC(USA) Young Adult Volunteers have worked with the homeless, women, and children. Then examine the various issues, challenges, and joys they encountered. This is their first time to present their story to a congregation.
Alyson and Emily spent the last year in South Korea serving the city of Daejeon through teaching English, working in a women’s shelter, a homeless shelter, and a soup kitchen. As Young Adult Volunteers they learned about the culture and political atmosphere of South Korea with a critical eye towards US involvement. Nassau Presbyterian sponsored their work and calls them friends.


Our Artist in Residence

Armando Soso

September 18
9:15 a.m., Music Room

“Through my weaving, I work to expresses my dreams, my memories, the overlapping cultural influences of my life in the United States, and my aspirations for the future. The traditional elements repeated in different forms throughout my textiles are a means of connecting with, celebrating, and preserving the rich and fascinating Guatemalan culture of my childhood.”
Armando Sosa was born into a weaver’s family in Guatemala. As a young boy he was given the task of guarding newly dyed threads drying on the grass of the riverbank; by the age of sixteen he was working on a compound-harness loom. Now a resident of the Princeton area, his tapestries are exhibited widely and he was named “Artist of Exceptional Ability” by the United States Government.


1 Corinthians

George Hunsinger

Beginning September 25
9:15 a.m., Dining Room, Maclean House

George Hunsinger returns for the 20th year to lead this in-depth Bible study, which continues a verse-by-verse examination of the First Letter of Paul to the Corinthians. After a review of the earlier chapters, he will pick up at Chapter 14. The Corinthian congregation wrestles with doctrinal and ethical issues in conversation with their “founding pastor” Paul. Within his correspondence, Paul offers us compelling good news in his understanding of the cross, the resurrection, worship, and life together in Christian community.

Entry to Maclean House, the yellow house next door to the church building, is through the rear garden door. Bring your own Bible or pick one up underneath the flat screen monitor on the first floor of the church near the kitchen.

George Hunsinger is Professor of Systematic Theology at Princeton Theological Seminary. He is the founder of the National Religious Campaign Against Torture.


Nassau in Malawi

Liz Heinzel-Nelson

September 25

Jesus’ call to care for the poorest of the poor led Liz Heinzel-Nelson and her family to live for a year in Malawi, Africa. While there she met Sydney, one of the one million orphans living in the 4th poorest country in the world. When she returned in 2009 she helped to found Villages in Partnership (VIP), a Christ-centered non-profit organization working to lift Sydney and 19,000 others out of extreme poverty. Liz will share stories, strategies, challenges, miracles and how the gospel is powerfully changing lives today.
Liz Heinzel-Nelson is Executive Director of VIP. She grew up in Princeton, younger sister to Loretta Wells, and now lives with her family in Allentown, New Jersey. She leads teams to Malawi several times a year. Nassau partners with VIP to empower thriving village life.


Coming in October

  • Election Issues

  • Jesus in Asia

 

Small Groups – Fall 2016

Feed Your Mind and Your Heart Will Follow

Small-groups-logo-color-med

Offering an opportunity for fellowship and love in a world ever more in need of the Kingdom of Heaven, Small Groups return to Nassau this October with a wide range of themes.

  • What good is your faith when you are too afraid to read the news?
  • How are American Creation myths relevant in an election year?
  • What do we have to do with white privilege?
  • What can we do about the New Jim Crow?
  • How did six women change the world of the New Testament?
  • Overwhelmed by it all? Pick up your coloring book or learn how to photograph what you care about.

Groups meet weekly for six to ten weeks. Sign up on My Nassau above or during Fellowship. Books are available for purchase in the church office during regular business hours or during Fellowship.


Available Small Groups


Full catalog: Small Groups Fall 2016 (pdf)

While the PDF includes all of the Fall 2016 offerings, the small groups listed below are the ones with spaces available.


Following Jesus in a Culture of Fear, by Scott Bader-Saye
Sundays, 9:15-10:30AM 9/25-11/27 (new members are always welcome)

Room 202, Nassau Presbyterian Church
Linda & John Gilmore, and Keith Mertz, leaders

Linda and John Gilmore, and Keith Mertz, have participated in and led small groups for many years. Linda is the Business Administrator at Nassau Church. John is senior vice president, chief operating officer, and treasurer of Princeton Theological Seminary. Keith Mertz is an engineer for Lockheed Martin.

The American Creation Myth (reading A Mercy, by Toni Morrison)
Sundays, 12:15-1:45PM 10/2-11/20 (BYO-Lunch)

Room 202, Nassau Presbyterian Church
Melissa Martin, leader

Melissa Martin is a third-year student at Princeton Theological seminary and an Adult Education intern at Nassau. She also works in the church office as the Administrative Assistant for Pastoral Care. Between her many responsibilities, she loves to sneak in a good novel, because she finds that in those books her big theological questions are explored in a refreshingly human way.

The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness,  by Michelle Alexander
Tuesdays, 7:00-8:30PM 10/4-11/15

Shenk Home, Princeton Junction
Jonathan Shenk, leader

Jonathan Shenk is a member of the New Brunswick Presbytery’s Mass Incarceration Task Force which seeks to educate and engage member congregations to bring healing to a destructive system. He is also a member of the Princeton/Trenton chapter of the Campaign to End the New Jim Crow and has served as a volunteer prison chaplain.

Enriching Our Faith with Calm and Color
Wednesdays, 10:00-11:30AM 10/5-11/9

Conference Room, Nassau Presbyterian Church
Lauren J. McFeaters, leader

Lauren McFeaters is an Associate Pastor at Nassau and a lover of all things faith-filled, mindful, and visual. Lauren is working on a pastoral project integrating the powerful balance and restoration found in Celtic crosses and pattern.

Do What You Have the Power to Do: Studies of Six New Testament Women, by Helen Bruch Pearson
Thursdays, 9:30-11:00AM 10/6-11/17

Music Room, Nassau Presbyterian Church
Joyce MacKichan Walker & Kristie Finley, leaders

Joyce MacKichan Walker is the Minister of Education at Nassau. Kristie Finley is the pastor of Abundant Grace Dinner Church, a PC(USA) 1001 New Worshiping Communities, and the project coordinator for the Confirmation Project, a Lilly Endowment funded grant studying confirmation across five Protestant denominations.

The Sacred Art of (Your) Photography
Thursdays, 7:30-9:00PM 10/6-11/10

Conference Room, Nassau Presbyterian Church
Ned Walthall, leader

Ned Walthall has been a member of Nassau Church since 1987 and is the geeky guy you see taking pictures at coffee hour.

Adult Education August 2016

Coffee and bagels served at every class


Gravestone Art and Symbolism

Lorna & Phil Wooldridge, Wise Owl Workshops

August 7, 11:15AM
Assembly Room

Explore the progression and interpretation of early symbols or icons, from those seen in family burial plots to the more elaborate ones seen in the “rural” and lawn park cemeteries of the Victorian era and, later still, in the Memorial Parks of the 20th Century. Modern examples of memorialization and symbolism will be included, as will the changing techniques and skills required by the early slate and sandstone carvers, contrasting with today’s techniques such as laser etching. The program will conclude with photographs taken at The Princeton Cemetery.

Lorna and Phil Wooldridge run Wise Owl Workshops, which was created to teach children about the migration of the Monarch butterfly, but has grown to cover subjects as diverse as gravestone art and native gardening. Lorna currently tutors privately, specializing in dyslexia intervention and remediation. Phil worked for over 20 years in software development and is now working as a tutor alongside Lorna.


Mozart in Vienna

Bill Walker

August 14, 11:15AM
Assembly Room

Learn about Mozart’s years in Vienna and his relationship with Emporer Joseph ll. Discuss the Josephine “enlightenment,” and see how it affected Mozart’s career, shedding some light on the legends of his death and burial.

William F. Walker, bass, has performed as an opera singer, concert soloist, and choral artist throughout Europe and the United States. As an opera singer, Mr. Walker has appeared with the Lyric Opera of Chicago, the Zurich Opera, the International Opera Studio, and the Festa Musica Pro of Assisi, Italy. Now with the Princeton Singers eleven years, Mr. Walker is also bass soloist at Nassau Presbyterian Church.


Developing a Formula for Sainted Women

Sandi Goehring

August 21, 11:15AM
Assembly Room

In the early church, women were equal to men in martyrdom and sainthood, but over time, various formulas developed, creating a different paradigm for female saints. Trace the evolution of formulas of sanctity and consider the Church’s motivations for gender-specific standards.

Sandi Goehring earned her M.Div. from Princeton Theological Seminary in 2008 and, during her middler year, interned at Nassau. She is currently writing her dissertation at Union Presbyterian Seminary and teaching part-time at Randolph-Macon College.


The Farminary at PTS

Nate Stucky

August 28, 11:15AM
Assembly Room

Why might Princeton Theological Seminary be training leaders for the church and the world on its 21-acre farm? Do pastures and pastors have anything in common? Can Augustine and agrarianism contribute to the same discussion? Come to this session to explore these questions and learn more about the Farminary at Princeton Seminary.

Nate Stucky serves as Director of the Farminary Project at Princeton Theological Seminary. Nathan grew up on a farm in Kansas where his love for Christian faith and agriculture first took root. Nate earned a Ph.D. in Christian Education and Formation from Princeton Theological Seminary. Most recently he sees the Farminary as a locus for enacting the integration of theological education and agrarianism. He lives in Princeton with his wife and three children.

Adult Education July 2016

Coffee and bagels served at every class


 

Back to the Future: Justices, The U.S. Supreme Court, and the Constitution

Larry Stratton

July 10, 11:15AM
Assembly Room

This course will review the major cases of the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2015–16 term, the jurisprudential trends on the Court in the wake of the passing of Justice Antonin Scalia and President Obama’s nomination of Federal Appellate Judge Merrick Garland to replace him, and the future of the Court and American Constitutional Law.

Larry Stratton is Assistant Professor of Ethics and Constitutional Law and Director of the  Stover Center for Constitutional Studies and Moral Leadership at Waynesburg University. He  has taught courses relating to ethics and law at the University of Pennsylvania, Pepperdine,  Villanova, and Drew Universities and Georgetown University Law Center. While pursuing his  M.Div. and Ph.D. he was a teaching fellow at Nassau Presbyterian Church and served as a  member of the Adult Education Committee.


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Unconventional Conventions; Thank You, William Wirt

Mark Herr

July 17, 11:15AM
Assembly Room

Other countries have conventions, party conferences and caucuses, but only the US has caucuses, primaries and conventions. Is this any way to run a railroad?

Mark Herr is a Managing Director, Head of Corporate Communications of Point72 Asset Management, L.P. He is responsible for creating and overseeing the firm’s enterprisewide
internal and external communications strategy and operations. Previously, Mr. Herr was a member of the administration of New Jersey Governor Christine Todd Whitman, serving as  he
Director and Assistant Attorney General in charge of New Jersey’s Division of Consumer  affairs and Bureau of Securities. Mark is a member of Nassau Presbyterian Church.


Talking Heads: “And you may ask yourself / Well… How did I get here?”

Mark Herr

July 24, 11:15AM
Assembly Room

The only thing less stable than this year’s electorate is a Donald Trump–Elizabeth Warren Twitter war. Never in the history of modern politics have the two party’s major candidates been so reviled by so many. To paraphrase the political sage, Pogo, have we met the enemy  and he is us?


Doing Theology in Central America Today

Karla Koll

July 31, 11:15AM
Assembly Room

Churches in Central America face escalating violence, increasing economic inequality, and environmental degradation. The Latin American Biblical University trains leaders to confront these challenges. Learn how liberation theology continues to evolve and inform ongoing struggles for more just societies.

A mission co-worker of the Presbyterian Church (USA), Karla Koll has worked in theological
education in Central America for more than two decades. She holds a Ph.D. in Mission,  ecumenics, and the History of Religions from Princeton Theological Seminary.


Mission Partners: June 2016

UPDATE from Westminster Presbyterian Church:

Monthly Co-Hosts at Bethany House of Hospitality Vespers: April 14, 2016

BethanyHouse_4In preparation for the 5th Annual Bethany Garden party, members of Nassau and Westminster along with Bethany House of Hospitality residents dedicated their time and energy to begin cultivating the Bethany Garden, and preparing for its expansion. In 2015, Westminster received a $10,000 from the Trenton Health Team for yoga classes and to expand two gardens. The Bethany Garden expansion will more than double the harvest for residents and The Crisis Ministry of Mercer County’s Food Pantry clients. After working hard, we broke bread, prayed and fellowshipped together.

BethanyHouse_2 BethanyHouse_1

Communiversity: April 2016

WPC_Communiversity_2!Muchisimas Gracias to Nassau! Once again Westminster Presbyterian Church and Westminster Community Life Center had the best location at the 2016 Communiversity; right in front of Palmer Square! This year members of Nassau helped us host our information table, and also sold beautiful soap to raise money for our Get SET After School Program. Westminster also helped Nassau coordinate with the Campaign to End the New Jim Crow Trenton/Princeton Chapter an interactive experience within a solitary confinement cell replica. Westminster’s pastor and members enjoyed taking photos with our partners: i.e. Nassau members, Princeton Mayor Liz Lempert, and Mercer County Freeholder Samuel Frisby, and the Campaign to End the New Jim Crow Trenton/Princeton Chapter members.

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3rd Annual Trenton Unity Walk: Sunday, May 1, 2016

UnityWalk_5UnityWalk_8Despite the rain, Nassau and Westminster leaders and members helped lead over 100 people of all faith traditions to walk in remembrance of the lives of men, women, and youth killed by violence in the City of Trenton during the past year. Pictures and short bios of the victims of violence, and resources to support the grieving families were distributed. Prayers in song and word were shared at the sites of violence. After simultaneously departing from Westminster Presbyterian Church and the Islamic Center of Ewing all the participants gathered at the Ghandi Garden. Kim Ford, who lost her son to violence in March 2015, and Councilman Duncan Harrison Jr. who lost his mother and a best friend to violence, challenged everyone to keep working to end the violence in Trenton. Men of Hope prayed for all the youth present.

UnityWalk_1 UnityWalk_2 UnityWalk_6

Intergroup Dialogue (IGD) Retreat: May 7, 2016

IDG_Retreat_1IDG_Retreat_4Over 50 pastors, leaders, and members representing Shiloh Baptist Church, the Presbyterian Church of Lawrenceville, Nassau Presbyterian Church, and Westminster Presbyterian Church participated in an Intergroup Dialogue Retreat on Saturday, May 7, 2016 at Westminster called, A Conversation Among Four Churches. The IGD Retreat was led by the New Jersey Intergroup Dialogue Coalition founded by Rev. Dr. D A Graham, and facilitated by members of Nassau and Westminster that he had trained over three months in 2015. The retreat was an 8-hour workshop that explored the intersection of identities including race, ethnicity, gender, religion, social class, and sexual orientation. The workshop allowed participants to learn about various social identities as well as build knowledge to engage in dialogue with others regarding identity. The feedback was so positive that we are looking forward to planning another Intergroup Dialogue Retreat in the near future at Nassau.

Joint Worship & Ecumenical Advocacy Days: June 5, 2016

Joint_Worship_4Joint_Worship_2Westminster enjoyed welcoming and worshipping with 25 members from Nassau on Sunday, June 5.  In order to expose Nassau members to some of our multiple Trenton partners, we acknowledged the presence of representatives from A Better Way, Inc., the Campaign to End the New Jim Crow Trenton/Princeton Chapter, East Trenton Community Center, Yielded Vessels Fellowship Ministries (YVFM), and Men of Hope. Nassau’s Minister of Christian Education, Joyce MacKichan Walker, the Rev. Nadira Keaton and Elder Thomas Keaton of YVFM, and Pastor Karen Hernandez-Granzen officiated the Lord’s Supper in English and Spanish. Trenton Council Woman Marge Caldwell-Wilson, a Scottish Presbyterian, also worshiped with us. Rev. Patti Daley, led us in a prayer for Shalom in the City of Trenton.

Joint_Worship_6 Joint_Worship_7 Joint_Worship_3 Joint_Worship_1

Following worship, Nassau’s youth and Westminster’s Elder Jacque Howard did an outstanding job sharing what they had learned at the annual 2016 Ecumenical Advocacy Days in Washington, D.C.

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UPDATE from Cetana Educational Foundation:

KT Field

Chenault Spence, the president of the Cetana board, just returned recently from a visit to Myanmar. While there he visited the Cetana learning center in Kyaing Tong, located in the “Golden Triangle” near the border with Thailand, Laos, and China. Cynthia Paul, who received her degree in English language teaching thanks to a Cetana scholarship, returned to Kyaing Tong a few years ago to found the learning center, which already has over 300 students studying English. Cynthia, always full of energy and new ideas, has now launched a new initiative at the learning center called the “Rice Village Project.” Her goal is to provide an opportunity for young girls in remote villages to continue their education. The Myanmar government provides schooling through grade 5.  However, after that, many students, particularly those in poor, remote areas, drop out because there are no opportunities for them to advance. Most go to work in the rice fields of their villages, but some girls become the victims of traffickers as they seek to earn more money for their families. For this reason, Cynthia’s initial focus is on female students.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERACurrently she has three young girls in residence  in Kyaing Tong. They come at the recommendation of their teachers from distant villages and live at the learning center, while their parents provide modest “compensation” in the form of rice. During the day they attend regular school in Kyaing Tong, 6th grade through high school, and in the afternoons, they attend English language classes at the learning center.

Eventually, Cynthia would like to expand this program to include as many as 30 girls. Cetana’s board is submitting proposals for funding of this expanded program to local and international NGOs as well as seeking funding from private individuals. If financing is successful, Chenault Spence says, “It will be possible to acquire proper dormitory space and hire a staff to oversee the girls and provide academic support.  These young girls will then have a chance not only to graduate from high school, but also to master English and access possibilities unimaginable in their home villages.”

 


UPDATE from Villages in Partnership

Thank you for supporting our small team for this year’s water walk we were able to raise $1,500 for our Nassau Presbyterian walking team. TrizaWe walked for Triza who lives with her elderly grandmother and so desperately wants to go to school, hopefully Stephanie Patterson will get to meet her this year while on a Friendship trip to Malawi, Africa with Villages in Partnership July 22-30.

To help Stephanie while on her friendship trip with Villages In Partnership she will need to bring a suitcase filled with all sorts of items, the suitcase will be located in the main office, suggestions are listed below:

  • Ibuprofen
  • Adult/children’s vitamins
  • Nebulizers/inhalers
  • Anti-fungals
  • Triple antibiotics
  • Yarn
  • Knitting needlesStephanie Patterson
  • Fabric
  • Flip flops
  • Tooth brushes
  • Tooth paste
  • Soap
  • Children’s percussion instruments
  • Cash for needed items on the ground
  • Lightweight blanket

Thank you for helping us fill Stephanie’s suitcase

We look forward to hearing about Stephanie’s trip upon her return.

Choirs for Children & Youth 2016-17

Dear congregation, and especially the families of our children and youth choristers,

I would like to share with you the plans for our choral programming for children and youth in the coming program year.  Ingrid Ladendorf, Early Childhood Advisor at the Diller-Quaile School of Music and adjunct faculty at TCNJ, will continue as the director of the Joyful Noise Choir,   masterfully introducing the joy of singing to our youngest voices and continuing to bless our church with her cheerful and caring spirit.  Our own Patty Thel will serve as the interim director of the Carol Choir, Choir 3-4-5, the Middle School Choir, and Cantorei for the 2016-2017 season.  Patty brings many gifts to our choral programming, including a wealth of experience as a music educator, church choir director, and Sunday school teacher. Past director of the Trenton Children’s Choir, Patty is also the founder and director of the Westminster Conservatory Choir, and she is the director of the Middle School Vocal Institute at Westminster.  Our children and youth will be in good hands with Patty and Ingrid.

We will maintain the same structure for choir rehearsals that we had this past year, and we intend on upholding traditions such as the Christmas Pageant and the Christmas Alumni Choir.  At the same time, there will be reflection on our choral programming in conversation with the congregation, and a search will be launched in late fall to find permanent leadership for our children and youth choirs.   While the position will no longer be full-time, I am confident that we can attract the right person to be a part of our next chapter in our church’s vibrant and integral choral program for children and youth.

Thank you all for your support of the ministry of music at Nassau, and thank you for upholding our church in prayer as we grow in faith through song.

 

Sincerely,

Noel Werner

Adult Education June 2016

Coffee and bagels served at every class


Mysteries That Matter: A Theology of Community

Joyce MacKichan Walker

June 12, 11:15AM
Assembly Room

Expect a plot and a murder and a clever detective. Discover a community, a theology of darkness and light, a fallen and redeemed humanity, and a brilliant, best-selling Canadian mystery writer with a deeply spiritual, biblically-grounded heart and mind. Louise Penny — the series begins.

Joyce MacKichan Walker had the great privilege of interviewing best-selling mystery author Louise Penny in the eastern townships of Quebec during her fall of 2015 sabbatical. An aficionado of mystery, Joyce has read this series of ten books twice, and can’t wait for number 11 on August 30! The other thing she loves is being an educator and pastor at Nassau — her 27th year.


The China Challenge: Shaping the Choices of a Rising Power

Thomas J. Christensen

June 19, 11:15AM
Assembly Room

Many see China as a rival superpower to the United States and imagine its rise is a threat to U.S. leadership in Asia and beyond. Tom Christensen argues against this zero-sum vision. He describes a new paradigm in which the real challenge lies in dissuading China from regional aggression while
encouraging the country to contribute to the global order.

Tom Christensen, William P. Boswell Professor of World Politics of Peace and War and Director of the China and the World Program at  Princeton University, will discuss his most recent book on China (published in 2015) and the challenge navigating U.S.–China relations.


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The Pastor’s Diary: How a Conventional Conservative Became a Theological Liberal

William R. Phillippe

June 26, 11:15AM
Assembly Room

“Over my life, I have learned that early myths are very formidable, but I have also learned that other people have different myths that are just as formidable. I have learned that we all do and must have myths to live by. But my early myths were no longer serving their function of helping me make sense of my existence. I had to find others. And that is what this book is about — my constant search for myths that mattered as I let my mind truly explore and analyze my experiences.”

Born and raised in Pittsburgh, PA, Bill Phillippe was mentally wired to go into science and was awarded the Western Pennsylvania Physics Award. But with the encouragement of a few professors he took the road into the Presbyterian ministry instead.


2016-17 Young Adult Volunteers – Apply Now

A Year of Service for a Lifetime of Change

Nassau believes that God calls young adults through their experiences in relationship and in serving others. Memorable mission trips as youth or as college students stir in us a desire to know God more and to see God’s world with eyes other than our own. The PC(USA) Young Adult Volunteer program (YAV) is a wonderful opportunity to do so!

YAV sends young adults to US and international mission sites to do such things as:

  • Engage in environmental protection work in Peru
  • Work on immigration reform in Arizona
  • Work on sex traffic prevention in Kenya
  • Tutor children and youth
  • Support art education in underserved populations

Read on below to learn about financial and one-on-one support to serve God in a variety of national or international mission sites. You can participate if you are between the ages of 19 and 30.

Where do I start?

Apply through YAV

To learn how to become a PC(USA) Young Adult Volunteer, visit the Presbyterian Mission Agency’s YAV website.

Application Deadlines

  • Early Decision: December 1 (National and International)
  • Round 2: February 1 (National and International)
  • Round 3: April 1 (National Only)
  • Last Call: June 1 (National Only)

Apply for Nassau’s fellowship

YAVs commit to fundraising a minimum amount to contribute to the costs of the year. The minimums are $3,000 (National) or $4,000 (International). You can apply to Nassau for us to contribute half of your fundraising goal ($1,500 for national, $2,000 for international)! The PC(USA) covers the remaining costs of the year. The total cost for a year of service is $22,000 on average, including travel costs, orientation and debriefing retreats, health insurance, room and board, and a basic living stipend.

To apply for the Nassau fellowship, send a of copy your YAV application and letters of reference to Nassau Presbyterian Church (ATTN: YAV, Joyce MacKichan Walker), 61 Nassau Street, Princeton, NJ, 08542. After reviewing your application, we will contact you to set up an interview, either in person or by phone.

We hope that through YAV you will experience God’s deep love for humanity and the mission of the church as one and the same. Through you, Nassau Church will be blessed by learning about your experience and the places and people you serve.

Resources

 

Forgiveness and Reconciliation Seminar

Lenten Small Groups Keynote Kickoff

Forgiveness and Reconciliation

Dr. Bo Karen Lee

All encourage to attend this seminar on Forgiveness and Reconciliation on Sunday, January 31, at 2:00 p.m. in Niles Chapel. With Dr. Bo Karen Lee of Princeton Theological Seminary, we will examine the theological foundations of how we understand and live out forgiveness today. There will be refreshments and fellowship at 1:45 p.m.

Bo Karen Lee is associate professor of spiritual theology and Christian formation at Princeton Theological Seminary. Before joining the Princeton Seminary faculty, she taught in the Theology Department at Loyola College in Baltimore, Maryland, where she developed courses with a vibrant service-learning component for students to work at shelters for women recovering from drug addiction and sex trafficking. She now enjoys teaching classes on prayer for the Spirituality and Mission Program at Princeton Seminary, in addition to taking students on retreats and hosting meditative walks along nature trails.