The Rhythm of Virginia Theological Seminary
The
flow of studies at VTS is much different than what I experienced in college or
law school. (Admittedly, that was
1974-1981, so things may have changed significantly in that time.) During the normal seminary calendar, instead
of the Mon-Wed-Fri and Tues-Thurs schedule, classes meet once a week. Some courses also have one hour “section meetings” during the week. But that is not the “flow” that has my
attention. Rather, what is quite new,
and very uplifting, is the flow of community life that revolves around worship
and prayer.
Every
class begins with a prayer led by the professor. While that may seem like a
“duh” thing since this is a seminary, it really is a new and wonderful
experience. Think about it for a
moment—we’ve all been to Sunday School or similar situations and opened with
prayer, but that never happens in an academic setting. Seminary is nothing like Sunday School. Every class is in a college-like classroom
and the students are all busy taking notes in preparation for an upcoming quiz
or exam. So the scene is familiar, the
prayer is a new and welcomed variation.
Most
important to the flow of life at VTS is how intertwined worship is on a daily
basis. Every student is required to attend
at least one worship service per day Monday through Friday. (It is an honor system, no one signs in and
no one is taking roll.) There are a
number of opportunities each day. Morning
Prayer takes place at 8:15 each day except Thursday. Each Thursday, the day begins with a
Formation Group meeting where I meet with the same group of six classmates and
a professor at the professor’s home. The
Formation group opens with a prayer service led by one of the students on a
rotating basis. On Wednesday at noon,
there is a full Eucharist (the Episcopal equivalent of the Sunday service) with
a full choir, a sermon, etc. It is the
centerpiece of worship at VTS and almost everyone makes it to that
service. Every other day of the week
there is a shorter worship service at noon and a prayer service at 5:15.
While
I always attend the Wednesday Eucharist and occasionally attend other noon
services and evening prayer, my personal worship discipline is to attend the
morning prayer service (and Formation Group) every day. So far, I have been able to be faithful to
that commitment and it has proven to be a great blessing. It may surprise some, but I have found that
beginning each day in corporate prayer is more spiritually uplifting than sitting
down at a desk to check the email that arrived overnight.
The
Morning Prayer sets a tone that helps keep me mindful throughout the day about why
I am at this seminary. It reminds me
that while I want to do well scholastically and while there are stressors to be
faced, the ability to study the Word of God and Christian Theology is a
privilege and blessing.
I
hope and pray that each of you are well and wish you God’s Peace.
Randy
I love it! My convent years and MA years were similar. God bless.
ReplyDeleteI love it! My convent years and MA years were similar. God bless.
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