Eastern Region Ministry Course

The Eastern Region Ministry Course, based in Cambridge, is a part-residential theological training course which offers initial ministerial training on behalf of the Church of England. It used to offer this for the Methodist Church in Britain, the United Reformed Church, and occasionally other churches in England. These other Churches have now withdrawn from partnerships in regional training courses. Students typically attend the course for two or three years.

The ERMC was formed in September 2005 as an amalgamation of the former East Anglian Ministerial Training Course and part of the former St Albans and Oxford Ministry Course. Students tend to come from the Eastern region of England and the dioceses covered are: Ely, Norwich, St. Edmundsbury and Ipswich, St. Albans, Peterborough and Europe. Students thus come from the counties of Norfolk, Essex, Suffolk, Cambridgeshire, Bedfordshire, Luton, Hertfordshire and Northamptonshire (or parts thereof). ERMC also takes students from Diocese in Europe of the Church of England, which covers the continental Europe. ERMC offers the academic content of Reader (Licensed Lay Minister) training for the dioceses of Norwich, Ely, St. Albans and St. Edmundsbury and Ipswich. Students from a broad spectrum of church traditions are represented on the course, and worship on the course is very varied, some services led by staff but often by students. At March 2016, there were approximately 60 ordinands studying on ERMC and about 60 trainee Readers, making EREMC the largest member of the Cambridge Theological Federation.

The ERMC is one of the seven full member institutions of the Cambridge Theological Federation. Students usually take academic programmes offered through the CTF and validated by Durham University, namely either the BA in Theology for Mission and Ministry or the MA in Theology. These programmes offered are part of the Common Award system. As a part-residential course, training is offered in two different forms of a dispersed learning mode: either through attendance of evening classes in the Cambridge, Norwich or St Albans centres, or by means of an on-line live class using Adobe Connect. There are six residential weekends per annum as well as an eight-day summer school.

The small core staff team is supplemented by a team of module teachers and other tutors.

Formational training, whereby all aspects of a student's life and experience are combined, is a key part of the course, and academic learning is supplemented by supervisions with a local supervisor. Regular meetings with a (non-affiliated) person to allow the student to receive spiritual direction are also encouraged.

There used to be a small "mixed mode" training scheme associated with ERMC: the Peterborough Project offered full-time training for ordinands of the above-mentioned churches, especially the Church of England. There are plans to relaunch full-time training elsewhere in the region in 2016.

The current principal of the ERMC is the Revd Dr. Alex Jensen. The former principal, Canon Dr. Ian McIntosh, left in 2015 to become Head of Formation at the Church of England Ministry Division.[1]

Notable alumni

List of notable alumni of the Eastern Region Ministry Course or its predecessors:

Notable staff

List of notable staff of the Eastern Region Ministry Course or its predecessors:

References

  1. https://www.churchofengland.org/media-centre/news/2015/06/new-head-of-formation-announced.aspx
  2. "Christine Hardman to be Twelfth Bishop of Newcastle". Diocese of Newcastle. 2 September 2015. Retrieved 11 September 2015.
  3. Eastern Region Ministry Course (2 September 2015). "APPOINTMENT OF VEN. CHRISTINE HARDMAN AS BISHOP OF NEWCASTLE". Thinking Anglicans. Retrieved 11 September 2015. Christine is to be the first diocesan bishop who trained on a course
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.