Program gives UMHB students taste of real-life counseling ministry
Posted: 10/13/06
Valerie Vineyard, University of Mary Hardin-Baylor graduate psychology major, provides one-on-one counseling with a client. The hours together assist the client and fulfill practicum requirements for the student. (Photo by Carol Woodward/UMHB) |
Association links UMHB
students to real-world ministry
By Jennifer Sicking
University of Mary Hardin-Baylor
BELTON—Twice a week, two University of Mary Hardin-Baylor counseling students put what they have learned in classrooms into practice in real-world situations as volunteer interns at Churches Touching Lives for Christ—a faith-based social services agency in Temple.
At the agency, the interns provide formal and informal counseling, said Ty Leonard, UMHB Community Life Center director. Formal counseling involves two people sitting in a room sitting together talking, and the informal involves the intern being a listening, caring presence among the agency’s clients.
“They’re making emotional connections out there with some people who sometimes don’t get that caring gesture,” Leonard said.
Bell Baptist Association made the connection possible by bringing together the agency and the university. The association also has approached the counseling center to provide services to all its churches—a project remains in the beginning stages, with a meeting planned soon to assess needs of churches.
“We will have a frank discussion of how we can coordinate our services and what we can do,” he said. “Some of what they can do could involve classes on parenting, school issues and grief.”
Both avenues of outreach—to the community and the churches—meet the community life center criteria.
“We are seeking to give back to the community. The community has always been supportive of UMHB and the center,” Leonard said. “By working with the Bell Baptist Association, we get a strong sense of what the community actually needs. The pastors and the churches are the front line.”
The opportunities also provide the students with a richer counseling experience, he added.
“It gives our students a true flavor of what it means to be a community counselor,” he said.
For Tom Henderson, director missions in Bell Baptist Association and adjunct professor at UMHB, Christianity in the real world is what both the university and association try to accomplish. It’s a relationship that goes both ways, providing education, training and opportunities.
Students gain practical experience in churches and local ministries. University professors provide training seminars and workshops for pastors and laity. Past seminar topics have included preaching and how to minister to the grieving, with an ethics and integrity seminar planned for February.
“There’s a synergy image of two working together can do more than apart,” Henderson said. “We provide students the opportunity and background to accomplish a common goal—expand the kingdom of God.”
Bill Muske, UMHB director of church relations, agrees.
“Both the university and the association should see themselves as only components to the larger picture. Both should have a kingdom approach rather than each being an end unto itself,” he said. “Our ultimate goal is to advance the kingdom of God in our Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria and to the ends of the earth. By working together, we can draw upon the resources of each other and strengthen the work of both.”
Each brings different valuable tools to the table to further that goal, working “hand in glove,” Henderson said. The university provides education, training and equipping for ministry, and the association offers students opportunities to live out Christianity in the world.
“We desire to produce and provide qualified individuals to fill ministry positions where needed,” Muske added. “We also desire to help those currently serving to improve themselves in areas of ministry.”
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