ESR Reports Vol. V, No. 1

   
New Faculty Member Michael Brenneis: An Ecumenical Spiritual Journey
New Faculty Member Michael Brenneis: The Quaker Connection
Introducing Marty Sulek, Director of Development
A Closer Look: New Grants for Faculty Research, Digital Quaker Collection
Curious Connections: Quaker Seminary and Richmond's African American Churches
Summer Reunions: ESR Sends Representatives to Yearly Meetings
Recommended Reading: Bonus Online Review
Traveling in Ministry: One Alum’s Experience
Alumni/ae News: Extended Online Version
 

New Faculty Member Michael Brenneis: An Ecumenical Spiritual Journey

Michael Brenneis was born into a Catholic family. When he was a small child, he attended daily Mass with his grandmother. To Michael, the dark church lit by candles and smelling of incense and the Mass recited in Latin were “mysterious but not intimidating.”

“Those symbols and that setting spoke to me, and I think I identified a religious calling at that point,” he recalls. But because his parents “weren’t enamored” of the structured lifestyle of Roman Catholic clergy, he wasn’t inclined to enter the priesthood.

“When I was thirteen, we lived in Youngstown, Ohio, and my family got ‘evangelized’ by a group of traveling Baptists; rather abruptly we switched to the Baptist church,” he recounts. The Baptists encouraged study of the Scriptures, and, his religious inclinations reawakened, Michael became a “serious student of the Scriptures.” Such study affected him intensely: “All my religious feelings coalesced around Scripture, and at thirteen, I first articulated a call to ministry.”

Because he was a good student and “word-oriented,” the combination of rational examination and evangelical study of Scripture allowed him to “concretize” his faith. “It was a stage along the way,” he reflects. “Until I realized that though you can do a lot with words, you can’t do everything with words.”

Two or three years beyond seminary, while he was pastor of a congregation, Michael “recognized the limit of words,” a revelation that led him to the Shalem Institute for Spiritual Formation in Washington, D.C. where he studied spirituality with Gerald May and Tilden Edwards. (He became close friends with May, and later they worked together to “define commonalities between spiritual direction and psychiatric counseling.”)

“What really happened during those two years at the Shalem Institute,” says Michael “is that I discovered contemplative prayer. I found a way to pray, to move into God, to return to the kind of wordless experience I had as a child.”

--Donne Hayden. Read Donne’s profile of the new assistant professor of pastoral care and counseling in the current issue of ESR Reports. Click here for a PDF.

7/1/03