Sessions
For over 35 years, the Calvin Symposium on Worship has annually gathered together worshipers from many Christian traditions across Canada, the US, and beyond, bringing together people from a variety of roles in worship and leadership, including pastors, worship planners and leaders, musicians, scholars, students, worship bands and teams, organists, visual artists, preachers, chaplains, missionaries, liturgists, council and session leaders, and more. Cosponsored by the Calvin Institute of Christian Worship and the Center for Excellence in Preaching at Calvin University and Calvin Theological Seminary, the Symposium aims to encourage leaders in churches and worshiping communities of all sizes and settings.
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| 2023 | ||
| Thursday, February 9th | ||
| 12:00 AM |
An Orchestra at Your Fingertips: Organ Possibilities in Worship Rhonda Sider Edgington, Hope College 12:00 AM This session is for organists, aspiring organists, the curious, and the inquisitive. No one person has as many sounds at their disposal [or as many keys and buttons!] as an organist. Let's discover new sounds together in this session by listening to new organ music for worship, learning ways to incorporate the organ into your services [even if you don't have a regular organist], and exploring some of the many tonal possibilities the organ has to offer. |
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| Friday, February 10th | ||
| 12:00 AM |
Biblical Thinking for the Regular Folks and Leaders in Your Church Dru Johnson, The King's College 12:00 AM This workshop is designed for interested lay folks, ministry leaders, and pastors for the sake of exploring the expansive intellectual/spiritual tradition of scripture. The biblical thought-world can hold its own with the ancient Greeks and modern scientific enterprise alike, yet we often don’t understand how scripture’s “thinking” can guide us through the thorniest issues in our culture. This workshop will help participants learn to think alongside the biblical authors by accessing the coherent systems of ideas across the Old and New testaments that not only permeate our own cultural and intellectual traditions, but offer a sophisticated critique of our society. |
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| 12:00 AM |
James Abbington, Emory University 12:00 AM Presented at the 2023 Calvin Symposium on Worship, this session led by James Abbington and Brandon A. Boyd features a practical reading through of 18 accessible choral pieces designed for contemporary worship settings. The presenters emphasize selecting music that is sensitive to the evolving needs of post-pandemic choirs while providing insights into the history and performance style of spirituals and other liturgical works. |
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| Wednesday, February 8th | ||
| 12:00 AM |
Compelling Preaching: A Conversation with Neal Plantinga and Laura de Jong Neal Plantinga, Calvin Institute of Christian Worship 12:00 AM Vivid imagery, compelling stories, perceptive exegesis, pastoral sensibilities, theological clarity, cultural fittingness--each of these gifts contributes immensely to compelling, transformative preaching. Compelling preaching features the dynamic interplay of each of these strengths. This conversation will explore how these dynamic interactions come about, how we cultivate them, and how the practice of polishing, and studying, exemplary sermons can stretch not only award-winning authors but also those of us struggling to shape compelling sermons for people who may not always seem to appreciate it. |
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| Thursday, February 9th | ||
| 12:00 AM |
Creating a Sense of Belonging with Youth in Worship and Church Life Lena Crouso, Southern Nazarene University 12:00 AM What does it mean to be religious? Spiritual? How does a sense of place, identity, culture, and embodied engagement relate to a young person’s sense of belonging to Christ’s church, including the public worship gathering? We will explore these questions and share stories about how young people actively participate in the life of the church. |
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| 12:00 AM |
Discerning Leadership with Students Angela Williams Gorrell 12:00 AM How can mentors help students discern the leadership roles God has called them to in the church and on campus? In this seminar, Joanna Wigboldy will walk through the process she uses in the ministry leadership class at Calvin University to help students find ways to practice leadership, build community, and love the church. The seminar will center the voices and stories of Calvin students who have been through this discernment process and will honestly explore the ways it helped them enter specific leadership roles as well as what learning gaps they had when they entered those roles. Responses by Angela Williams Gorrell. |
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| 12:00 AM |
Engaging in Communal Worship: Psalms and Psalm-singing Karin Maag, Calvin University 12:00 AM This third session is part of “Experiencing the Contours of Early Modern Worship,” a series of five linked sessions bringing participants into the world of Reformation Europe. What was it like to attend worship in Wittenberg in 1530, Geneva in 1550, London in 1570, or Venice in 1590? When people in different confessional contexts joined in worship and participated in the sacrament in this period, what differences and similarities were there? Join Yudha Thianto [Calvin Theological Seminary] and Karin Maag [Meeter Center] in an encounter with the theory and practice of congregational song in the Reformation era with a particular focus on psalm-singing. |
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| Wednesday, February 8th | ||
| 12:00 AM |
Experiencing Early Modern Worship Karin Maag, Calvin University 12:00 AM This first session is part of “Experiencing the Contours of Early Modern Worship,” a series of five linked sessions bringing participants into the world of Reformation Europe. What was it like to attend worship in Wittenberg in 1530, Geneva in 1550, London in 1570, or Venice in 1590? When people in different confessional contexts joined in worship and participated in the sacraments in this period, what differences and similarities were there? Join Meeter Center Director Karin Maag in an exploration of congregational worship in early modern Europe from the perspectives of both the clergy and the worshiping community. |
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| Thursday, February 9th | ||
| 12:00 AM |
Glocal Perspectives on Contemporary Praise and Worship María Eugenia Cornou, Calvin Institute of Christian Worship 12:00 AM Every Sunday, thousands of worshiping communities in the United States and all over the world rely completely or partially on contemporary praise and worship [CP&W] in corporate worship. How has CP&W evolved, what are the movement’s main trends, and how is it experienced around the world? How is CP&W shaping Christians’ understanding of God, themselves, and the world? Join us to learn from renowned scholars in the field. |
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| 12:00 AM |
Hardwired to Sing: Entrainment, lnteractional Synchrony, and the Spirit-ed Magic of Corporate Song W David O. Taylor, Fuller Theological Seminary 12:00 AM How can science help us understand what happens when Christians sing together in a common physical space? What are the neural and relational benefits of singing? This session will explore how the Holy Spirit works through what Christians in previous centuries have called “the second book of God”: nature, or the gifts of the physical world. |
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| Wednesday, February 8th | ||
| 12:00 AM |
Indigenous Wisdom & Christian Practice: Indispensable Insights for Christians in Every Time & Place Kai Ton Chau, Calvin Institute of Christian Worship 12:00 AM Learn about the remarkable story of the World Christian Gathering of Indigenous Peoples and gain insights about worship and culture emerging from the accredited theological degrees offered by NAIITS—An Indigenous Learning Community. We’ll hear wisdom from the experiences in Australia of engaging a colonialist Christian history and develop a vision for how Christians in every continent can better work together to learn from each other and grow together in Christ. |
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| 12:00 AM |
Intergenerational Worship in Global Contexts María Eugenia Cornou, Calvin Institute of Christian Worship 12:00 AM Psalm 148 describes a compelling vision of “young and old together” in worship. In every cultural context, there are unique challenges and opportunities in realizing this vision. Come learn from leaders from four continents about how each generation is invited to participate and contribute to worship—and what barriers, challenges, and changes they are experiencing in their contexts. Come away with new questions to ask about your context—and cross-cultural wisdom to share. |
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| 12:00 AM |
Joining the Community of Worship: Baptism Lyle D. Bierma, Calvin Theological Seminary 12:00 AM This second session is part of “Experiencing the Contours of Early Modern Worship,” a series of five linked sessions bringing current-day participants into the world of Reformation Europe. What was it like to attend worship in Wittenberg in 1530, Geneva in 1550, London in 1570, or Venice in 1590? When people in different confessional contexts joined in worship and participated in the sacraments in this period, what differences and similarities were there? Join Lyle Bierma [professor emeritus of church history, Calvin Theological Seminary] and Karin Maag [Meeter Center] as they present John Calvin's theology of baptism and the practice of this sacrament more widely across the Reformation era. |
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| Thursday, February 9th | ||
| 12:00 AM |
Stephanie Clintonia Boddie, Baylor University 12:00 AM This panel will discuss ongoing research on the practice of lamentation in the Black church tradition as a formative pedagogical tool for both theological education and the broader community. Special attention will be given to the value of embodied learning with a cohort of seminarians, religious practitioners, scholars, and faith leaders who have visited sites where massacres and atrocities against Black life have occurred. |
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| 12:00 AM |
Paul Ryan, Calvin University 12:00 AM Join the twenty-minute University worship service and then gather with the Calvin University Worship Apprentices, who will reflect on their chapel planning process and share lessons learned about leading congregational singing. |
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| Friday, February 10th | ||
| 12:00 AM |
Te-Li Lau, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School 12:00 AM In this session, Te-Li Lau will contrast the current culture's understanding of shame with the biblical framework, suggest ways to rehabilitate our fractured understanding, and draw out the implications of a renewed understanding for public worship. |
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| 12:00 AM |
Metanarratives and Identity: The Challenge and Opportunity of Colossians Scott Hoezee, Seminary Theological Seminary 12:00 AM In this session Scott Hoezee talks with Marianne Meye Thompson about her Colossians commentary and most particularly about the sweeping claims Paul makes regarding Christ. How does Paul's metanarrative fit in a world that promotes not one, but a diversity of stories, and how does Paul's call to find our identity in the Christ of this grand narrative sound to people today? The session also explores how to preach and teach this message in our present context. |
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| Thursday, February 9th | ||
| 12:00 AM |
Moving from Dividing Walls of Hostility toward Christian Unity Justin Giboney 12:00 AM In this session panelists share best practices for navigating difficult topics that divide the church and discuss the importance of Christian unity. |
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| 12:00 AM |
Pouring Forth Speech: The Webb Telescope and God's Glory Deborah Haarsma, BioLogos 12:00 AM Theologian John Stek called the physical creation "the glory robe of God." John Calvin liked to observe that it is our privilege to live in the “glory theater” of God's creation and that the reason God made human beings to stand upright is so we could better lift up our eyes to see the stars above. In the last year more of the universe's glory has been revealed by the stunning images emerging from the new James Webb Space Telescope. Few people can help us appreciate these new glimpses into God's creation better than astronomer Deborah Haarsma. In this session, Dr. Haarsma and Scott Hoezee will discuss what new facets of our Creator God's work have been revealed by the Webb Telescope’s images. |
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| Wednesday, February 8th | ||
| 12:00 AM |
Preaching as a Communal Practice Laura de Jong 12:00 AM It is tempting to think of sermons as a solo “performance”—something a preacher prepares in isolation. What if we changed our vision to think of preaching as a communal activity from start to finish? How does a congregation shape a sermon as it is being preached? How can preachers intentionally engage the congregation as they prepare sermons and when they discuss or reflect on sermons after worship? We’ll discuss proven practices and try to imagine some new possibilities too. |
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| Friday, February 10th | ||
| 12:00 AM |
Proclaiming and Responding to God's Word: Exegesis and Preaching Karin Maag, Calvin University 12:00 AM This fifth session is part of “Experiencing the Contours of Early Modern Worship,” a series of five linked sessions bringing current-day participants into the world of Reformation Europe. What was it like to attend worship in Wittenberg in 1530, Geneva in 1550, London in 1570, or Venice in 1590? When people in different confessional contexts joined in worship and participated in the sacrament in this period, what differences and similarities were there? Join John Thompson [professor emeritus, Fuller Theological Seminary] and Karin Maag [Meeter Center] as they explore how pastors interpreted scripture and preached to their congregations. |
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| 12:00 AM |
Re-forming the Liturgies of Our Daily Life and Work Katie Ritsema-Roelofs 12:00 AM A lot has been written about the importance of Sunday liturgies and their role in forming the life and worldview of worshipers. This session will focus on helping Christians identify the rituals and liturgies in their workplaces and daily lives and discern how to reform, reject, or reconstruct new rituals that facilitate tangible expressions of love for God, neighbor, and creation. |
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| 12:00 AM |
Sharing and Serving: The Lord's Supper Karin Maag, Calvin University 12:00 AM This fourth session is part of “Experiencing the Contours of Early Modern Worship,” a series of five linked sessions bringing current-day participants into the world of Reformation Europe. What was it like to attend worship in Wittenberg in 1530, Geneva in 1550, London in 1570, or Venice in 1590? When people in different confessional contexts joined in worship and participated in the sacrament in this period, what differences and similarities were there? Join Sue Rozeboom [Western Theological Seminary] and Karin Maag [Meeter Center] for an overview of the range of perspectives on and practices of this sacrament in the Reformation era. |
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| Thursday, February 9th | ||
| 12:00 AM |
Silver Linings: What Churches Are Learning about Pastoral Worship Ministry through the Pandemic Fernando A. Cascante, Calvin Institute of Christian Worship 12:00 AM What have we been learning about ministry through the pandemic? What benefits, strengths, virtues, and gifts have surprised us? Our panelists for this session are listeners and learners—people listening for what local ministry leaders are saying and for what is going on under the surface, even things not explicitly spoken. We'll learn from their listening and then receive some tips about how all of us can be more attentive in our listening practices. |
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| 12:00 AM |
Singing for Life Stories of the Transformative Power of Music Kary Bosma, Calvin University 12:00 AM The Handlon Tabernacle Choir began in 2016 and has grown to more than forty students from the Calvin Prison Initiative at Handlon Correctional Facility in Ionia, Michigan. Originally started to provide music for the program’s special events, the choir has become an opportunity for students to develop their musical skills and explore what it means to find new life in community. This presentation will include stories and reflections from members of the choir and the choir director about the impact of music in prison. |
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| Wednesday, February 8th | ||
| 12:00 AM |
Singing Psalms in Modern Worship Wendell Kimbrough 12:00 AM The psalms were written to be sung. But if your church favors guitar and band-led modern worship, how do you sing the psalms? Songwriter Wendell Kimbrough answers this question through the use of short antiphonal psalm refrains that are singable and memorable for his congregation and provide a musical entry point into a psalm. They have become a beloved staple in his home congregation’s worship. In this workshop, Wendell will share some favorite psalm refrains, discuss the mechanics of their use, and respond to questions from attendees. The goal is for all attendees to go home with a plan for regularly incorporating musical psalms into their worship services. |
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| Friday, February 10th | ||
| 12:00 AM |
The Colossian World Today: Opportunities for Preaching Laura de Jong 12:00 AM In the 2023 Worship Symposium’s five main worship services we are looking at Colossians. In this session the five people preaching on Colossians will reflect together on how the situations facing the Colossian Christians long ago remain relevant today. Najla Kasab, Marshall E. Hatch Sr., Laura de Jong, Danny Román-Gloró, and Scott Hoezee will talk about what they observed in crafting their sermons for this year's symposium and on the larger opportunities all preachers have to bring forward Paul's words to address the many crises of our own time. |
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| Thursday, February 9th | ||
| 12:00 AM |
The Fruit of the Spirit, Mental Health Crises, & Our Practices of Christian Worship Angela Williams Gorrell 12:00 AM In a world of anxiety, depression, and fatigue, how do we both explain and invite people into experiences of profound joy, peace, and gentleness? Where do our practices of worship—our preaching, singing, praying, and communing—contribute to our mental health crises? How might these very practices become means of grace that bring healing and hope? And how might this be true for people in very different generational contexts? |
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| 12:00 AM |
Wilson Cunha, Calvin Theological Seminary 12:00 AM A panel of Calvin Seminary faculty with a variety of research and ministry experiences will reflect on the practice of lament. What are the different faces of lament? What is the goal of lament? How can pastoral leaders facilitate lament? What does lament reveal about the nature of God and what it means to be human? Those attending the panel will also be able to raise questions and join the discussion. |
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| Friday, February 10th | ||
| 12:00 AM |
Welcoming All Bodies and Abilities into Worship and the Life of the Church Lindsay Wieland Capel 12:00 AM This session explores a biblical view of disability and practical ways of including people with disabilities in every aspect of the church for the flourishing of the entire worshiping community. |
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| Wednesday, February 8th | ||
| 12:00 AM |
What’s Missing from Models of Christian Formation? Dru Johnson, The King's College 12:00 AM This panel discussion will explore misunderstood or neglected scriptural and theological themes related to Christian formation. |
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| 12:00 AM |
Worship Music from Africa and the African Diaspora James Abbington, Emory University 12:00 AM What a gift to have in a single conversation leading experts on the rich history of Christian worship music in the continent of Africa as well as from African diaspora communities in the United States and England! What treasures and insights from this rich history should be more celebrated and cherished? What misunderstandings should be corrected? How can we learn from this rich history without misappropriating it? What signature examples of congregational song should we all learn more about and from? How can we all continue to learn more and explore more deeply connections across continents and Christian traditions? |
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| Friday, February 10th | ||
| 12:00 AM |
Writing and Choosing Songs for Singing Paul Ryan, Calvin University 12:00 AM What makes a song singable? Meet with Paul Ryan and Wendell Kimbrough as they discuss the morning worship service held in the chapel [10:30–10:50 a.m.] and the qualities of congregational song that help the church join its voices as one. |
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| 12:00 AM |
Writing Songs of Lament and the New Creation Carlos Colón, Baylor University 12:00 AM Drawing from Psalms, Colossians, Revelation, and the global church, Carlos Colón invites us to write texts and songs of lament, protest, and hope. We will examine ways to give voice in our worship and prayer gatherings to our pain, our questions, and our desire for deep hope and the healing of all creation. We will examine songs with these themes in the "Santo, Santo, Santo / Holy, Holy, Holy" hymnal and in classical and contemporary sources. |
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