Introduction
Rev. Willard W. C. Ashley Sr., MDiv, DMin, DH xiii
Part I
What Are the Foundations of Spiritual Leadership?
1. Singing the Creator's Song in a Strange Land
Lisa Sharon Harper, MA, MFA 3
2. The Psychology of Learning to Lead
Jeffrey R. Gardere, PhD 13
3. The Universal Tools of Effective Leadership
Michael Gecan, BA 31
4. Healthy Clergy, Healthy Congregations, and Healthy
Communities
Tanya Pagán Raggio-Ashley, MD, MPH, FAAP 41
5. Friendships
Rev. Lee B. Spitzer, MDiv, DMin 59
Part II
How Do You Evaluate Spiritual Leadership?
6. Bi-vocational Clergy (and Congregations)
Rev. Renee S. House, MDiv, PhD 73
7. The New Business Model for the Non-Profit Organization
Ronald Thomas, MHCS, SWP 85
8. Teaching Worship
Rev. Gregg A. Mast, MDiv, PhD 95
9. Teaching Ministry in an Urban World: Evaluating Your
Curriculum
Rev. Warren L. Dennis, MDiv, DMin 105
10. Congregations and Communities in Transition
Rev. Earl D. Trent Jr., MDiv, DMin 117
Part III
How Do You Care for Others?
11. Pastoral Care as a Foundation for Leadership
Rabbi Stephen B. Roberts, MBA, MHL, BCJC 129
12. Leadership at the Borders of Difference
Rev. Brita L. Gill-Austern, MDiv, PhD 139
13. Healing Those Who Hurt
Mary Pender Greene, LCSW-R, CGP, and Terrie M. Williams, LCSW
149
14. Safety in Sacred Spaces
Rabbi Diana S. Gerson, MAHL 165
15. "Each Person Is Sacred": Leading toward Full Inclusion in Faith
Communities
Lisa V. Blitz, PhD, LCSW-R, and Mary Pender Greene, LCSW-R, CGP
179
16. People with Disabilities and Their Families: "Apart from" to "A
Part of"
Rev. Bill Gaventa, MDiv 193
17. Working with Undocumented Immigrants
Rev. Seth Kaper-Dale, MDiv 207
18. Why Are People Poor?
Rev. David Billings, MDiv, DMin 221
19. Contextual Leadership: An Urban Case Study
Rev. Anthony Miranda 229
Part IV
How Do You Collaborate with Specific Spiritual Leaders?
20. Kin'dom Come: Houses of Worship and Gender Justice in the
Twenty-First Century
Rev. Sally N. MacNichol, MDiv, PhD 239
21. Working with the Black Diaspora
Antoinette Ellis-Williams, PhD, MPA 249
22. Afro-Caribbean, Afro-Latino/a Spirituality: Hiding Religious
Beliefs Out in the Open
Rev. Carlos Alejandro, MS, MDiv, BCC 261
23. Working with Asians
Miyon Chung, MACSW, MATh, PhD 273
24. Working with Jewish Communities: Myths to Be Unlearned
Rabbi Joseph Potasnik, BA, MS, JD, and Rabbi Craig Miller, BA, MAFM
287
25. Working with Muslims
Imam Muhammad Hatim, PhD, DMin, and Shaykh Ibrahim Abdul-Malik,
PhD, EdD 297
26. Working with Catholics
Rev. Monsignor Richard Arnhols, MDiv, and Anne Masters, MA 311
27. Working with Protestants
Rev. Rose Niles, MDiv, DMin, and Rev. Kevin Park, MDiv, PhD 323
28. Leading a Multifaith Disaster Response Group
Rev. Julie Taylor, MDiv, CTR, EMT-B 333
Final Words
Phyllis Harrison-Ross, MD 345
Index 348
Rev. Willard W. C. Ashley Sr., MDiv, DMin, DH, a frequent speaker
on the topics of leadership development, clergy resiliency and
interfaith dialogue, is acting dean and associate professor of
practical theology at New Brunswick Theological Seminary. He was
the interim pastor at Union Baptist Church in Montclair, New
Jersey, and is the founding pastor of Abundant Joy Community Church
in Jersey City, New Jersey. He also serves as a consultant on
disaster recovery and clergy self-care to congregations and Fortune
100 companies. He is author of Learning to Lead: Lessons in
Leadership for People of Faith and coeditor of Disaster Spiritual
Care: Practical Clergy Responses to Community, Regional and
National Tragedy (SkyLight Paths).
Shaykh Ibrahim Abdul-Malik, PhD, EdD, earned his first doctor's
degree in science and education at Harvard University and his
second in Islamic studies from the Graduate Theological Foundation.
Following a twenty-five-year career with the New York City school
system, Dr. Ibrahim became a science advisor at UNESCO. In that
capacity, he organized and headed the first junior college in the
Islamic Republic of Maldives. Shaykh Ibrahim has been part of the
adjunct faculty in the School of English, Philosophy, Humanities,
and Religious Studies at Fairleigh Dickinson University since 2003.
His written works include Islam and Muslims: Twenty-Five Questions
and Answers (a widely distributed information booklet written in
the aftermath of the 9/11 tragedy); Islam and Muslims: Fifty
Questions and Answers; Ramadan: A Primer; and Prayer in Islam: A
Guide for Beginning Muslims, an Introduction for Non-Muslims.
Rev. Carlos Alejandro, MS, MDiv, BCC, is the clinical pastoral
education supervisor at New York's Calvary Hospital and is
certified by the Association for Clinical Pastoral Education
(ACPE). He has extensive experience in pastoral care and in
clinical pastoral supervision in both traditional and challenging
venues. The founding director of North General Hospital’s
Department of Pastoral Care and Education, Rev. Alejandro also
created and led Harlem’s Outreach Program for Emergencies (the HOPE
team), a faith-based critical incident stress management (CISM)
team. He went on to develop the first clinical pastoral education
(CPE) supervisory training program in Puerto Rico, which is based
in three hospitals and one major university. A board-certified
chaplain with the Association of Professional Chaplains, he served
as a corrections chaplain at Rikers Island Central Punitive
Segregation Unit and at the Manhattan Detention Center, known as
"the Tombs." A former journalist, Rev. Alejandro received a
master’s degree from Columbia University’s Graduate School of
Journalism and a master of divinity degree from New York
Theological Seminary. An ordained minister with the Christian
Church (Disciples of Christ), he lectures on Afro-Caribbean
spirituality and pastoral care, spirituality and trauma, and
cultural issues in end-of-life care.
Rev. Msgr. Richard Arnhols, MDiv, is pastor of St. John the
Evangelist Roman Catholic Church in Bergenfield, New Jersey. He is
also vicar for pastoral life for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of
Newark, overseeing more than fifteen departments geared to pastoral
service, and is a member of the College of Consultors and
Presbyteral Council. He is a regular contributor to the "Seeing and
Believing" column of The Catholic Advocate, the official biweekly
periodical of the archdiocese. As former pastor of the inner-city
St. Patrick's Church in Elizabeth, New Jersey, he wrote the
foreword to the recently released The Grand Old Man of the Port:
Dean Martin Gessner, the American Catholic Church, and Parish Life
in the Nineteenth Century, written by Carl Ganz Jr.
Rev. David Billings, DMin, has been an antiracist trainer and
organizer with The People's Institute for Survival and Beyond since
1983. After thirty-five years in New Orleans, he moved to New York
City in the fall of 2004 to work with The People’s Institute’s New
York office. In the fall of 2006 he was appointed the Pauline Falk
Chair on Community, Race, and Mental Health with the Jewish Board
of
Family and Children’s Services. Rev. Billings is an ordained United
Methodist minister. He also is a historian with a special interest
in the history of race and racism. Over the years, Rev. Billings’s
organizing work has been cited for many awards, such as the
Westchester County chapter of the National Association of Social
Workers Public Citizen of the Year; the New Orleans Pax Christi
Bread and Roses Award; the Loyola University of New Orleans
Homeless and Hunger Award; and the National Alliance against Racist
Oppression’s Angela Davis Award for community service.
Lisa V. Blitz, PhD, LCSW-R, is an assistant professor of social
work at Binghamton University. She brings years of experience as a
licensed clinical social worker and advocate for social justice to
her teaching and research. Her research focuses on effectiveness of
school-based interdisciplinary intervention with elementary and
middle school aged children; assessment of an
antiracist/anti-oppression model to inform management and
supervisory practices in social work and social services; and
privilege as it impacts social worker performance in crossracial
interactions with clients, staff team members, and supervisors. Dr.
Blitz earned her master of social work and PhD in social work from
Columbia University.
Miyon Chung, MACSW, MATh, PhD, an associate professor of systematic
theology, teaches systematic theology and ethics at Torch Trinity
Graduate School, Seoul, Korea. She was born in Seoul but immigrated
with her family to the United States in 1979. She received her BA
(government/pre-law) from the University of Texas at Austin and
subsequently received two master's degrees at Southwestern Baptist
Theological Seminary, in church social work and in theology. While
working on her PhD in theology at Southwestern Baptist Theological
Seminary, Dr. Chung taught classes in systematic theology as a
teaching fellow and concurrently served as academic dean of Dallas
Korean Seminary and Guatemala Baptist Seminary. Since returning to
Korea, Dr. Chung has been serving at Suwon Central Baptist Church
as a translator. She also teaches at the church’s associated Bible
College. Her international ministries include working with Baptist
World Alliance, Asia Pacific Baptist Fellowship, Diaspora Track of
Lausanne Consultation on World Evangelism, and Global Diaspora
Network.
Rev. Warren L. Dennis, MDiv, DMin, is ordained in the Presbyterian
Church (USA) and is the Dirk Romeyn Professor of Metro-Urban
Ministry at New Brunswick Theological Seminary, New Jersey. He
earned the master of divinity degree from Johnson C. Smith Seminary
in Atlanta and doctor of ministry degree from United Theological
Seminary, Dayton, Ohio. His specific interest is examining issues
of poverty, race, and culture in urban theological education.
Antoinette Ellis-Williams, MPA, PhD, graduated from the University
of Pittsburgh, Graduate School of Public and International Affairs
with a master of Public Administration and earned her PhD from
Cornell University, School of Human Ecology. Dr. Ellis-Williams is
currently the director of the Lee Hagan Africana Studies Center and
professor of women's and gender studies at New Jersey City
University (NJCU). She is also a minister at Bethany Baptist Church
in Newark, New Jersey. Some of her recent publications include
"Discovering the Possibilities: A Study of African American Youth
Resistance and Activism" and the poem “Letter from Mama Olewagi.”
Dr. Ellis-Williams is executive producer, director, research
methodologist, writer, assistant editor, and narrator for the
documentary Connecting Generations: The Lee Hagan’s Legacy. She is
an active member in the community, serving on several boards
including as immediate past president of the board of trustees for
East Orange, New Jersey, Hospital Association Governance Committee;
the regional policy board for the American Hospital Association
(AHA); New Jersey Hospital Association board of trustees; board of
directors for the Coretta Scott King Humanitarian Group; and the
board of the New Jersey Institute of Social Justice.
Jeffrey R. Gardere, PhD, better known as America's psychologist, is
one of the most widely sought-after experts in the field of mental
health. In addition to having a private practice in Manhattan, he
has garnered a reputation as being a top motivational and keynote
speaker and empowerment and media coach. Dr. Gardere is an
assistant clinical professor at Touro College of Osteopathic
Medicine in New York City. He is also the host of Dad Camp
(formerly on VH1), now on Twist TV in Canada, the chief contributor
to HealthGuru.com, and is the wellness director for the Philip
Stein Company. He is a contributor to NBC’s Today Show, MSNBC, and
the FOX Network. Dr. Gardere is the author of Love Prescription and
the coauthor of Practical Parenting with Montel Williams, the Emmy
award–winning TV talk show host. His first book, Smart Parenting
for African-Americans: Helping Your Kids Thrive in a Difficult
World, has been lauded as being "necessary for raising
African-American children in today’s society" (Black Issues Book
Review).
Rev. Bill Gaventa, MDiv, serves as director of Community and
Congregational Supports at the Elizabeth M. Boggs Center on
Developmental Disabilities and as associate professor at Robert
Wood Johnson Medical School, University of Medicine and Dentistry
of New Jersey (UMDNJ). In his role at the Boggs Center, Rev.
Gaventa works on community supports, training for community
services staff, spiritual supports, training of seminarians and
clergy, aging and end-of-life/grief issues, and cultural
competence. He has edited four books, written a number of book
chapters and articles, and served as the editor of the Journal of
Religion, Disability, and Health for fourteen years.
Michael Gecan, BA, is codirector of the Industrial Areas Foundation
(IAF) and a community organizer. He was trained in part by Saul
Alinsky. Gecan is lead organizer for East Brooklyn Congregations
and other New York–based organizations as well as the executive
director of United Power for Action and Justice, a Chicago-based
IAF affiliate. Gecan spent two decades wrestling with New York
politicians in an impassioned effort against all odds to build
three thousand new homes. His book, Going Public: An Organizer's
Guide to Citizen Action, tells how organized citizens can, with
discipline and dignity, outmaneuver bureaucracies and generate
change. Gecan’s vision of the richness of community life and the
value of public action has roots in the rough Chicago neighborhood
where he was raised.
Rabbi Diana S. Gerson, MAHL, has been successfully advancing the
New York Board of Rabbis' leadership role in confronting family
violence in the faith community since 2005. As a recognized
authority in the field, Rabbi Gerson has provided education and
training to more than three thousand members of the clergy and
faith leaders around the nation. She has also provided family
violence prevention education to more than a thousand teenagers and
adults through her extensive outreach in faith communities. In
October 2009, Rabbi Gerson founded a new organization, Love
Squared, which focuses on building leadership in faith communities
to support and engage their members in fostering healthy
relationships and healthy marriages. Love Squared will continue to
work in partnership with the New York Board of Rabbis as its lead
sponsor. She also has developed training programs for the New York
City Mayor’s Office to Combat Domestic Violence and has educated
faith leaders for the New York City Family Justice Centers. Rabbi
Gerson serves as a member of the board of directors of the National
Coalition Against Domestic Violence (NCADV) and continues to chair
its Jewish Women’s Caucus. Rabbi Gerson is a recipient of the Faith
Leaders Award from Affinity Health Plan and was named one of the
"21 Leaders for the 21st Century" by Women’s eNews. Her work in the
faith community has been the focus of articles in the New York
Daily News, Hadassah Magazine, Moment magazine, Women’s eNews, and
the Mann Report. Rabbi Gerson received her rabbinic ordination from
the Hebrew Union College–Jewish Institute of Religion in New York
City. She previously served congregations in Short Hills, New
Jersey, and Atlanta, Georgia.
Rev. Brita L. Gill-Austern, MDiv, PhD, is the Austin Philip Guiles
professor of psychology and pastoral theology at Andover Newton
Theological School (ANTS). She is faculty director of
Border-Crossing Immersions and has led border-crossing trips to
Nicaragua, El Salvador, and the Mexico-US border. She is committed
to interfaith dialogue and work between Jews, Christians, and
Muslims. She is a founding member of the Interreligious Center for
public policy. As a board member of Communities Without Borders,
she is active in work to stop the spread of global AIDS and to
educate AIDS orphans and other vulnerable children in Zambia and
India, to ensure a more hopeful future for them and our world. She
has also led a dual narrative immersion to Israel/Palestine and is
designing one in the US criminal justice system. She is an ordained
United Church of Christ pastor and served in three parishes in
Pennsylvania and California for eight years before joining the
faculty at ANTS in 1988. In a coedited volume, Feminist and
Womanist Pastoral Theology, she and Bonnie Miller McLemore lift up
the contributions of feminism and womanism to the discipline of
pastoral theology. She has contributed many articles and chapters
to the field of pastoral theology.
Lisa Sharon Harper, MA, MFA, is a speaker, an activist, an author,
an award-winning playwright, and a poet. Currently she is director
of mobilizing for Sojourners, a national Christian organization
committed to faith in action for social justice. Harper was the
founding executive director of New York Faith & Justice, an
organization at the hub of a new ecumenical movement to end poverty
in New York City. Her writing has been featured in the National
Civic Review, God's Politics blog, the Huffington Post, Patheos,
Urban Faith, Prism, and Slant33, where she has written extensively
on the role of government, tax reform, comprehensive immigration
reform, health care reform, poverty, racial justice, and
transformational civic engagement. Harper’s faith-rooted approach
to advocacy and organizing has activated people of faith across the
United States and around the world to address structural and
political injustice as an outward demonstration of their personal
faith. She earned her master’s degree in human rights from Columbia
University in New York City. Her book Left, Right, and Christ:
Evangelical Faith in Politics is coauthored by D. C. Innes (an
evangelical Republican who is also a Tea Partier). In it, Harper
and Innes explore their philosophies of government and business as
well as six major issues the next generations of evangelicals must
wrestle with to be faithful witnesses in the public square.
Phyllis Harrison-Ross, MD, is trustee, secretary of the New York
Society for Ethical Culture (NYSEC) and chair of the Social Service
Board for United Social Services, Inc., a NYSEC social action
affiliate. She is a trustee and member of the supporting
organization for the Ethical Culture Fieldston School. She
practices child and adult psychiatry, is emeritus professor of
psychiatry and behavioral health sciences at New York Medical
College, emeritus attending psychiatrist/chief of psychiatry at
Metropolitan Hospital Center and founder and managing partner of
Black Psychiatrists of Greater New York. Currently, she serves
fulltime as commissioner for the NYS Commission of Correction and
chair of the Commission Medical Review Board, which oversees the
operation and management of local and state correctional facilities
and secure residential juvenile treatment centers operated by the
Office of Children and Family Services. She is a past president of
Black Psychiatrists of America and received the American
Psychiatric Association's Solomon Carter Fuller Award. The All
Healers Mental Health Alliance (AHMA), an organization that Dr.
Harrison-Ross, along with the NYSEC and the Social Service Board,
was instrumental in forming, received an award for public health
leadership at the American Public Health Association meeting in
Washington, DC. It was bestowed for AHMHA’s work to bring hope and
healing to survivors following the 9/11 World Trade Center tragedy
and the devastation caused in the mid-south/Gulf Coast by Hurricane
Katrina and Hurricane Rita, the BP oil spill, and the Haitian
earthquake. She was recently appointed to the International
Advisory Board of the Auschwitz Institute for Peace and
Reconciliation.
Imam Muhammad Hatim, PhD, DMin, is Imam Warith Deen Muhammad
Professor of African American Muslim Studies at the Graduate
Theological Foundation in Mishawaka, Indiana. He has more than
twenty years of experience in the informal resolution of equal
employment opportunity (EEO) issues. As an imam with the Admiral
Family Circle Islamic Community (Admiral Family) in New York City,
he headed its justice ministry and the UN Summer Internship Program
in Human Rights in Geneva, Switzerland; he is also co-founder of
the Malik Shabazz (Malcolm X) Human Rights Institute. He sits on
several interfaith committees and is a chaplain with Disaster
Chaplain Services in New York City. He holds a BS in industrial
arts education, an MS in transportation planning and engineering, a
PhD in civil engineering (environmental), and a DMin from the
Graduate Theological Foundation and is a certified alcohol and drug
counselor (CADC) in New Jersey. He is a contributor to the book
Disaster Spiritual Care: Practical Clergy Response to Community,
Regional, and National Tragedy (SkyLight Paths Publishing).
Rev. Renee S. House, MDiv, PhD, an ordained minister in the
Reformed Church in America, has been serving on the faculty of New
Brunswick Theological Seminary since 1987 in a variety of roles
including six years as dean of the seminary. Presently, she serves
as associate professor of practical theology. She also ministers at
the Metuchen Reformed Church, working with educational ministries
and small groups, and leads retreats and workshops through the
Reformed Church in America. Her publications include a number of
essays and articles related to the theology and practice of
ministry and mission. She received her master of divinity degree
from New Brunswick Theological Seminary and holds a PhD from
Princeton Theological Seminary.
Rev. Seth Kaper-Dale, MDiv, has co-pastored the Reformed Church of
Highland Park with his wife Stephanie for the past ten years.
Together they are raising three little girls and raising a growing
church. In addition to general pastoral ministry, Seth specializes
in creating special needs housing and helping undocumented
immigrants get released from detention as well as coming up with
creative arrangements with Immigration Customs and Enforcement to
stop deportation.
Rev. Sally N. MacNichol, MDiv, PhD, has been an antiviolence
activist, advocate for survivors of domestic violence, and educator
for more than twenty-five years. She has counseled victim-survivors
of domestic violence, run empowerment groups for survivors, worked
with abusive men, and trained hundreds of staff from child welfare
programs and community and faith-based organizations across New
York City's five boroughs. She is currently the co-executive
director at CONNECT, a nonprofit organization committed to
eliminating gender and family violence in New York City, where she
also developed and directs CONNECT Faith, a program dedicated to
helping communities of faith address and prevent family violence.
She received her master of divinity and PhD in systematic theology
from Union Theological Seminary.
Rev. Gregg A. Mast, MDiv, PhD, is president of New Brunswick
Theological Seminary. He has served as a pastor in Johannesburg,
South Africa; Irvington, New Jersey; and Albany, New York. He has
also served as minister of social witness and worship and as
director of ministry services for the Reformed Church in America at
different times in his career. He is the author of The Eucharistic
Service of the Catholic Apostolic Church and Its Influence on
Reformed Liturgical Renewals of the Nineteenth Century, In
Remembrance and Hope, and Raising the Dead, among other books; was
a monthly columnist for the Church Herald for thirteen years; and
has published articles in popular and scholarly journals.
Anne Masters, MA, is the director of the Department for Pastoral
Ministry with Persons with Disabilities, Roman Catholic Archdiocese
of Newark; president of the Religion and Spirituality Division of
the American Association of Intellectual and Developmental
Disabilities; and board member of the New Jersey Coalition for
Inclusive Ministries. She has worked in various areas of pastoral
ministry as a lay ecclesial minister in the San Francisco Bay Area
and northern New Jersey and is a workshop presenter on inclusive
religious education and pastoral practices. She has a master's
degree in theology from the College of St. Elizabeth. Her published
works include "Inclusive Faith Practices for Children with Autism,"
Autism and Faith: A Journey into Community, and a book review of
Autism and Your Church in the Journal of Religion, Disability, and
Health.
Rabbi Craig Miller, BA, MAFM, serves as treasurer of the New York
Board of Rabbis and as a member of the board of directors of the
International Rabbinic Fellowship. Rabbi Miller works in the area
of interfaith, disaster chaplaincy, and campus spiritual advising.
In the latter capacity, he serves the Jewish community of Baruch
College, in New York City. Rabbi Miller was one of the original Red
Cross chaplains trained after 9/11, and he was stationed at the
Family Assistance Center and Ground Zero.
Rev. Anthony Miranda is the executive director of Elohim Community
Development and Outreach, Inc., located in the Richmond Hill
section of Queens, New York. It is the second largest food pantry
in New York City. Each week, Elohim provides eleven hundred
families and individuals with enough food to prepare three complete
meals a day for the week for a family of four. Miranda is a
graduate of the Blanton Peale Pastoral Care Studies program.
Rev. Rose Niles, MDiv, DMin, currently serves as the associate for
theological education and seminary relations for the Presbyterian
Church (USA) General Assembly Council (GAC). She previously served
as the head of staff of First Presbyterian Church of Mount Vernon,
New York, and as pastor of Emmanuel Presbyterian Church in
Manhattan. At the New York Theological Seminary, she has taught in
multiple programs, including the doctor of ministry program, and
has taught in their master's degree program at Sing Sing
Correctional Facility. Dr. Niles currently leads the Theological
Education Fund effort for the Presbyterian Church (USA) seminaries.
As the primary staff-person for the National Seminary Support
Network, she coordinates connecting congregations, presbyteries,
and synods to Presbyterian seminaries.
Tanya Pagán Raggio-Ashley, MD, MPH, FAAP, has dedicated her
professional life to improving social determinants of health to
reduce racial and ethnic health disparities and ultimately create
health equity for all. She has taught seminary students and clergy
about primary care, public health, and the important role of clergy
in health promotion and disease prevention. She was awarded the Dr.
Helen Rodriquez-Trias Women in Medicine Award by the National
Hispanic Medical Association for her efforts. She has collaborated
with her husband, Rev. Dr. Willard W. C. Ashley Sr., to teach and
host seminars for clergy, seminary students, congregational
members, and the community at large. She has held the position of
associate professor of medicine at several universities and is
board certified in preventative medicine and pediatrics. She holds
a bachelor's of science and a doctor of medicine from Rutgers
University. She completed a master’s in public health and a
fellowship in cardiovascular epidemiology at the University of
Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health.
Rev. Kevin Park, MDiv, PhD, is the associate dean for Advanced
Professional Studies at Columbia Theological Seminary in Decatur,
Georgia. Previously, he was a pastor of a multicultural church in
New Jersey and worked as the assistant director of the Office of
Asian American Program at Princeton Theological Seminary.
Mary Pender Greene, LCSW-R, CGP, is an accomplished individual and
group psychotherapist with more than twenty-five years of
experience and a thriving private practice. She is a dynamic
professional speaker, coach, and clergy consultant. She has been
instrumental in advising clergy and religious organizations on
compassion fatigue, supervision, referrals, and other mental health
issues. The goal is for clients to have healthier, more satisfying
relationships with themselves, loved ones, and colleagues. Her
inspirational keynotes and leadership development programs include
workshops, seminars, and training on a variety of topics. Her
background includes executive and management responsibility for a
large nonprofit organization.
Rabbi Joseph Potasnik, BA, MS, JD, is the former president and
presently the executive vice president of the New York Board of
Rabbis, the largest interdenominational body of its kind in the
world. He is also the senior rabbi at Congregation Mount Sinai in
Brooklyn Heights, New York. He is the cohost, along with Deacon
Kevin McCormack, of WABC's Sunday morning talk radio program
Religion on the Line, and he is the religious commentator for 1010
WINS radio. He also hosts the award-winning television series Faith
to Faith. He has served on the New York City Campaign Finance
Board, on the New York City Human Rights Commission, and as
chaplain of the New York Press Club. As chaplain of the New York
City Fire Department and the Fraternal Order of Police, Rabbi
Potasnik helped many families cope with the disaster of September
11, 2001.
Rabbi Stephen B. Roberts, MBA, MHL, BCJC, is the editor of
Professional Spiritual & Pastoral Care: A Practical Clergy and
Chaplain's Handbook and coeditor of Disaster Spiritual Care:
Practical Clergy Response to Community, Regional and National
Tragedy (both SkyLight Paths Publishing). He is a past president of
the National Association of Jewish Chaplains. Most recently he
served as the associate executive vice president of the New York
Board of Rabbis, directing their chaplaincy program, providing
services in more than fifty locations throughout New York, and
serving as the endorser for both New York State's and New York
City's Jewish chaplains. Prior to this he served as the director of
chaplaincy of the Beth Israel Medical System (New York), overseeing
chaplains and clinical pastoral education (CPE) programs at three
acute care hospitals, one behavioral health hospital, and various
outpatient facilities served by chaplains.
Rev. Lee B. Spitzer, MDiv, DMin, is the executive minister and
senior regional pastor of the American Baptist Churches of New
Jersey. He has pastored American Baptist congregations in Rhode
Island, New Jersey, and Nebraska. He is the author of several books
on spirituality and relational theology, including Making Friends,
Making Disciples, Jesus Christ from Cover to Cover, and Endless
Possibilities: Exploring the Journeys of Your Life.
Rev. Julie Taylor, MDiv, CTR, EMT-B, is a Unitarian Universalist
minister specializing in critical incident response, trauma, and
disaster spiritual care. She served for five years as the executive
director for Disaster Chaplaincy Services, located in New York
City. During the 9/11 recovery, Rev. Taylor was a chaplain at St.
Paul's Chapel at the World Trade Center site and has continued to
respond to local and national crises, including floods, building
collapses, fatal shootings, and airline disasters. In addition to
her work with Disaster Chaplaincy Services, Rev. Taylor serves as a
board member and a responder with the Unitarian Universalist Trauma
Response Ministry, is a member of the Hudson Valley CISM Team, and
is a volunteer EMT with the Central Park Medical Unit. She is a
certified trauma responder through the Association of Traumatic
Stress Specialists (ATSS) and a board-certified chaplain through
the National Association of Veterans Affairs Chaplains (NAVAC). She
received her master of divinity degree from Union Theological
Seminary in New York City.
Ronald Thomas, MHCS, SWP, is director of talent and human resources
solutions at Buck Consultants in New York City. He is also a
faculty member of the Human Capital Institute, facilitating two
certification tracks (Human Capital Strategist [HCS] and Strategic
Workforce Planning [SWP]). HR Examiner ranks him in the top
twenty-five among both talent-management influencers and human
resources influencers. He is the principal consultant at Strategy
Focused HR in New York. He is a member of the Harvard Business
Review Advisory Council, the Executive Online Panel at McKinsey
Consulting, and the Human Capital Institute's Expert Advisory Panel
on Talent Management Strategy. He is certified by the Human Capital
Institute as a human capital strategist (HCS) and strategic
workforce planner (SWP). His work has been featured in Inc.
Magazine, Wall Street Journal, Crain’s New York Business, Canadian
Business, Workforce Management, and Chief Learning Officer. He is a
graduate of Benedict College and New York University.
Rev. Earl D. Trent Jr., MDiv, DMin, is the fourth pastor in the
one-hundred- year history of the Florida Avenue Baptist Church in
Washington, DC. He also currently serves as chairman of the board
of Church World Service (CWS), a US-based global relief,
sustainable development, and refugee assistance agency, and is
active in both the American Baptist USA and the Progressive
National Baptist Conventions. In a model of cooperative
neighborhood improvement, Dr. Trent led the church in revitalizing
the LeDroit Park Civic Association, resulting in a
multimillion-dollar fifty-home renovation and rebuild investment by
Howard University, Verizon, and Fannie Mae in the LeDroit Park
neighborhood. He has served on many boards with special commitments
to economic reform, including justice for black farmers, workers'
rights, women ex-offenders, and the battle against sickle cell
disease. Author of A Challenge to the Black Church as well as many
journal articles, he is married to Dr. Janice Ray Trent, the owner
of Hearing Healthcare Services in Bowie, Maryland. They are the
parents of three adult daughters.
Terrie M. Williams, LCSW, one of Ebony magazine's "Power 150" for
Activism and Woman’s Day magazine’s “50 Women on a Mission to
Change the World,” is an advocate for change and empowerment. For
more than thirty years, she has used her influence and
communications expertise to educate and engage audiences in causes.
She launched the Terrie Williams Agency in 1988, with superstar
Eddie Murphy and the late jazz legend Miles Davis as her first
clients, and has continued to represent some of the biggest
personalities and businesses in entertainment, sports, business,
and politics including Prince and Mo’Nique. Her book Stay Strong:
Simple Life Lessons for Teens addressed challenges our youth combat
everyday. Her critically acclaimed book Black Pain: It Just Looks
Like We’re Not Hurting recounts her personal struggle with
depression and the impact the stigma of mental illness has
particularly on the African American community. Her creation of a
mental health advocacy campaign led to a collaboration with the Ad
Council and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration
(SAMHSA) on a national initiative of mental health recovery.
"Invaluable.... The breadth of topics and depth of presentation
assures that [this] will be a significant resource for seminary
education and practical ministry for years to come."
—Dwight H. Judy, PhD, professor emeritus of spiritual formation,
Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary; author, A Quiet
Pentecost: Inviting the Spirit into Congregational Life
“Timely, informative and inspirational ... much needed in a world
yearning for the creation and nurture of the fundamentally new that
is also fundamentally better.”
—Lester Edwin J. Ruiz, MDiv, PhD, director, Accreditation and
Institutional Evaluation, Association of Theological Schools
“Bold.... Offers most helpful guidelines for seasoned caregivers as
well as a new generation of potential leaders who recognize the
extraordinary gift of spirituality.”
—Cain Hope Felder, professor and editor, The Journal of Religious
Thought, Howard University School of Divinity
“The book we have been waiting for to move the church forward in an
uncertain age. An outstanding resource for congregational leaders.
Every member in every pew needs this book.”
—Ralph B. Watkins, PhD, DMin, associate professor of evangelism and
church growth, Columbia Theological Seminary
“A practical and necessary resource in theological education.... It
models in content and format the richness, multidimensionality and
flexibility characteristic of contemporary spiritual
leadership.”
—Dr. Carmen Nanko-Fernández, associate professor of pastoral
ministry and director, Ecumenical Doctor of Ministry, Catholic
Theological Union
“When the nation, corporations and religious communities cry for
creative and effective leadership with integrity, this timely book
answers the challenge.”
—Hak Joon Lee, professor of theology and ethics, Fuller Theological
Seminary
“An incredible cadre of leaders … provides insights and tools to
help empower the next generation to shape our communities and
shepherd our journeys.”
—Rev. David Emmanuel Goatley, PhD, executive director, Lott Carey
Baptist Foreign Mission Society
“A treasure chest.... I felt blessed being in the company of
leaders, being mentored all at once, at the flip of every
page.”
—Rev. Prof. Neal D. Presa, PhD, moderator, 220th General Assembly
of the Presbyterian Church (USA); pastor, Presbyterian Church,
Middlesex, NJ; affiliate assistant professor for preaching and
worship, New Brunswick Theological Seminary
“Persuasive [and] compelling.... Provides a contemporary leadership
model that integrates emotional, physical and spiritual aspects of
humanity, thereby offering future leaders the tools needed to
pursue personal growth and realize self-fulfillment.”
—Yvonne Simons, executive director, the Anne Frank Center, USA
“Helps spiritual leaders ... develop their leadership gifts in the
crucible of caring, crisis, community and congregational
environments. Your investment in walking through this book will
bring gracious and generous returns as you identify and implement
the lessons offered by gifted, wise and tested leaders.”
—Rev. Dr. Thomas R. De Vries, MDiv, DMin, general secretary,
Reformed Church in America
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