Alumni News

Full-Time Senior Minister, Second Congregational Church: Warren, Maine

Job Description

Second Congregational Church of Warren Maine is actively seeking a full-time Senior Minister to join our vibrant and welcoming community. With nearly 200 years of rich history, we celebrate traditional Sunday services enriched by the harmonious sounds of our Tracker organ, alongside our dedicated chancel choir and handbell choir. While we value our enduring traditions, we are also receptive to innovative ideas that can promote our growth and enhance our shared faith journey.


Additional Information

KEY RESPONSIBILITIES:
Advance the Kingdom of God.
Promote Christian Fellowship.
Guide people to the service of Christ.
Foster growth and enrich faith.

QUALIFICATIONS:
Ordained minister.
Master of Divinity degree or equivalent.
2-5 years pastoral experience preferred.
Strong faith and spirituality.
Demonstrated ability to lead and manage a large congregation and staff team.
Excellent preaching and teaching skills.
Strong interpersonal and communication skills.
Compassionate and empathetic.
Commitment to ongoing personal and professional development.

APPLICATION PROCESS:
Interested candidates must submit a full resume detailing past experiences and places of employment as a Senior Minister. A full background check will also be required. Please send your application to office.sccw@tds.net.

Reverend John R. Squire, STH ’59

The following obituary was originally Published in Des Moines Register  and can be found here


John R. Squire, 94, thought deeply and moved through this world with quiet humor, kindness, and patience. He passed away peacefully on 7/11/2025 at Harmony Gardens Senior Living, Maplewood, Minnesota, where he resided near his children since January 2024.

Born in Grinnell, Iowa to Edward Gray and Fern (White) Squire on 1/15/1931, John grew up in Shenandoah as the youngest of four brothers. As a youth, he helped at the family business, Squire Ice Cream Co., and became the youngest licensed pilot at Shenandoah airport. He graduated from Iowa State University, where he met his wife-to-be Martha Jane Dloughy. They married 12/27/1955 in Waterloo after he returned from 3 years as a teaching missionary in Japan. He attended Boston University School of Theology and was an ordained elder in the Iowa Conference of the United Methodist Church.

John served as a pastor in Waterloo, Mason City, Sioux City, and Des Moines. During his working years, he was also an admissions counselor at Morningside College and a counselor and child protection worker for the State of Iowa.

He loved deep conversation, classical music, bicycling, being outdoors, and traveling with family and friends. He and Martha delighted in hosting gatherings large and small. John’s meticulous craftsmanship showed in his multiple home improvement projects.

Preceded in death by his wife, his parents, and his brothers Edward Gray Jr. (Gray), George Varnum, and Wilbur Stewart (Bill) Squire. Survived by his children Debra Jane Squire Dietzman (Gordon) and Mark David Squire. Interment will be in Elmwood Cemetery, Waterloo.

Celebration of John's life: Monday, July 28 at Centennial United Methodist Church, 1524 W County Rd. C2, Roseville, MN. Gathering social, 3-4:30, Service, 4:30-5.

Memorials may be directed to the Des Moines Symphony, United Methodist Committee on Relief, Boston University School of Theology, or the ministry of your choice.

www.Washburn-McReavy.com

Shoreview Chapel 651-482-7606

Colgate Rochester Crozer Appoints BU STH Alumnus as Assistant Professor of (Queer) Theology

The following is an excerpt of an article from Colgate Rochester Crozer written by David Riddell, “Colgate Rochester Crozer Announces Appointment of Rev. J.J. Warren as Assistant Professor of (Queer) Theology,” published on July 14, 2025. Click here to read the full article.


Colgate Rochester Crozer Divinity School (CRCDS) is pleased to announce the appointment of The Reverend Jeffrey Joseph (J.J.) Warren IV (he/him) as Assistant Professor of (Queer) Theology and Lead of the Gender, Sexual, and Racial Justice (GSRJ) Program, effective July 16, 2025.

This appointment was made by President Dr. Angela D. Sims and Vice President for Academic Affairs Dr. Emilio Alvarez, who affirmed Rev. Warren’s bold commitment to justice, theological imagination, and scholarly excellence as powerfully aligned with the mission and vision of Colgate Rochester Crozer

Rev. Warren currently serves as Executive Director of the Young Prophets Collective, a nonprofit that equips and empowers LGBTQIA+ religious leaders and allies worldwide. He also lectures at the University of Vienna and has contributed as faculty affiliate to Colgate Rochester Crozer’s pioneering Doctor of Ministry in Queer and Trans Studies, which launched in Fall 2024.

 

Click Here for the Full Article

Ms. Barbara P. Norton, STH ’97

The following obituary was originally posted by AWRich Funeral Home and can be found here.


Obituary

BURLINGTON, VT – Barbara Norton, 84, died peacefully in her sleep during the early morning hours of July 1, 2025, at Birchwood Terrace Rehabilitation and Healthcare.

Barbara Jean Perry Norton was born on October 5, 1940, to Francis and Melba (Chandler) Perry. She grew up in Fairfax, VT and graduated from Bellows Free Academy – Fairfax in 1958. She completed a secretarial program at Champlain College the following year. Barbara married Arthur Norton on November 16, 1963, and after a short time living in Burlington, they raised three sons in Fairfax. When she wasn’t working or being a parent, she enjoyed sewing, quilting, and reading.

Barbara worked several jobs during her life including The Burlington Free Press, Northwestern Medical Center in St. Albans, IBM in Essex Jct., and as the assistant town clerk in Fairfax. She was also a member of Order of Eastern Stars in Fairfax as well as being one of the early volunteers for Fairfax Rescue.

In the 1980’s, Barbara felt the desire to become a minister but had only completed one year of college. After completing the requirements to become a Certified Lay Pastor, she led congregations in North Hyde Park and Eden Mills, VT. She took courses at CCV and transferred to Johnson State College where she graduated in 1994. She enrolled in Boston University’s School of Theology and earned a Master of Divinity in May of 1998. After graduating from BU, she became a minister in Eastport, Maine.

After retiring from the ministry, she and Arthur moved back to Vermont and settled in Chittenden County, eventually residing at Cathedral Square in downtown Burlington. In the years after Arthur’s death in 2012, Barbara was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s and Dementia. She spent the final seven years of her life in the memory care unit of Birchwood Terrace Nursing Home in Burlington.

Barbara is survived by her sons and daughters in law Jim and Carol of Newburyport, MA, Joel and Pam Norton of Essex Jct., VT, and Jon and Christina Norton of West Springfield, MA. She is also survived by her 7 grandchildren Jonathan, Spencer, Jack, Gwen, Nick, Abigail, and Lillian well as several cousins. She was predeceased by her parents, her husband, and her brother, Rev. James M. Perry.

Barbara’s family would like to thank the staff at Birchwood Terrace for their excellent care for her during the past seven years. Her sons would especially like to thank their aunt and Barbara’s sister-in-law, Kareen Perry of Colchester, for her support of their mother since their father’s death in 2012.

A celebration of Barbara’s life is scheduled for Monday, August 11th at 11am at the First United Methodist Church in Burlington on 21 Buell Street. There will be no visiting hours. Interment will occur at the convenience of the family.

In lieu of flowers. The Norton family requests that a donation be made to the First United Methodist Church in Burlington or the United Church of Fairfax, 8 Fletcher Rd., Fairfax, VT 05454.


Service Details

  • Celebration of Life

    When

    Monday, August 11th, 2025 10:00pm

    Location
    First United Methodist Church
    Address
    21 Buell Street
    BURLINGTON, VT 05401
Notes
A celebration of Barbara’s life is scheduled for Monday, August 11th at 11am at the First United Methodist Church in Burlington on 21 Buell Street. There will be no visiting hours. Interment will occur at the convenience of the family.

Assistant Youth Group Leader, Part Time, Winchester Unitarian Society: Winchester, MA

Assistant Youth Group Leader
Reports to: Director of Youth Ministries
FSLA Status: Non-Exempt (Hourly, .15 FTE)

Job Summary: The Assistant Youth Group Leader (AYGL) assists the Director of Youth & Children’s Ministries (DYCM) in planning and leading the Winchester Unitarian Society Youth Group (WUSYG). WUSYG is an active and well-established youth group focused on social justice and service. Serving youth in grades 9-12 from high schools in Winchester, Mass., and surrounding communities, WUSYG membership is about 15-30 youth per year. WUSYG benefits from The Winchester Unitarian Society’s rich tradition of youth ministry that is focused on acceptance, respect, and service to others.

The ideal Assistant Youth Group Leader sees the opportunities inherent in working with high schoolers and brings their own ideas, energy, inspiration, creativity, fun, flexibility and compassion to the role. The AYGL will be working with a multifaceted, smart, articulate group of youth who can (and will) have a serious discussion on social justice in one minute and the latest pop culture trend in the next.

Hours: This position runs from the last week in August through the end of the 2nd week of June, which is 43 weeks, at 5 hours per week, plus up to 100 additional hours for additional events including but not limited to sleepovers, fundraisers, worship services and a week-long service trip during Massachusetts April School Vacation.

Rate: $20/hour

How to Apply: To apply, please email the current DYCM, Sam Wilson, sam.wilson@winchesteruu.org with a resume, attached, and a “cover letter” as the body/text of your email. Applications will be taken on a rolling basis with the intent to be hired ASAP, then begin in earnest in the end August.


For Additional Information, Click here

Nursery/Childcare Provider, Part Time, Winchester Unitarian Society: Winchester, MA

Job Description

Nursery/Childcare Provider
Reports to: Director of Youth and Children’s Ministries (DYCM)
Status: part-time, 3.5 hours/week, September - June (0.07 FTE). Possible additional hours in summer and for childcare at a few church events during the year, as mutually agreed upon.
Compensation: $25/hour
Effective: ASAP (August, 2025)

Job Summary: Provide a safe, healthy, nurturing environment for children as “childcare” (ages 2 through 13 years) during choir practice (8:30 - 10:15 AM), and “nursery” (ages 6 months through 3 years) during Sunday morning church activities/meetings/services (10:15 AM - Noon).
To Apply: please email the current DYCM, Sam Wilson, sam.wilson@winchesteruu.org with a resume, attached, and a “cover letter” as the body/text of your email. Applications will be taken on a rolling basis with the intent to start as soon as possible.


For Additional Information, Click Here

Prof. Andrew Shenton publishes article in The Guardian on composer Arvo Pärt

The following is an excerpt from the article “The god of small things—celebrating Arvo Pärt at 90” by Professor of Music Andrew Shenton, published on July 24, 2025 by The Guardian.  


In many ways Arvo Pärt and John Williams’s music couldn’t be further apart. One celebrates simplicity, purity, and draws much of its inspiration from sacred texts; the other captures strong emotions in sweeping orchestral scores. And yet the two men are today’s most performed contemporary composers. Bachtrack’s annual survey of classical music performed across the world placed Pärt second (John Williams is in the top spot) in 2023 and 2024. In 2022, Pärt was first, Williams second. This year, Pärt might return to No 1 as concert halls and festivals worldwide celebrate his 90th birthday, on 11 September.

...


Read the full article

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Church for Everyone Else

This article was written by Steve Holt and originally published in the 2025 issue of focus magazine, the annual publication of the BU School of Theology. This article can be found on page 20. 


Amid dropping church attendance and rising religious trauma, two services—one in person and one virtual—welcome those who’ve been hurt by religion. They’re also redefining what a worshipping community looks like.

Thursday Night Church is co-led by Associate Pastor Rachel Barton (’23) and Audrey Woodhams (’26), the creative director (below).

Boston’s Old South Church traces its roots to Puritans in 1669, more than a century before the birth of the United States. For 150 years, the congregation—which had split from Boston’s Puritans over a dispute about baptism—gathered in the Old South Meeting House, best known as the site where Samuel Adams riled up would-be revolutionaries against British occupation. The church moved to its current location at Dartmouth and Boylston Streets in 1875, and today its gothic stone campanile soars above Copley Square. To whatever degree Boston has a religious “establishment,” 356-year-old Old South Church is it. But behind those old stones exists a Christian community extending a hand to those who’ve perhaps been wounded by established religion. For decades, the United Church of Christ congregation has had progressive theology and an open posture to all comers—LGBTQIA+, doubting, unhoused, or undocumented. A new Thursday evening service, however, packages those fundamentals in a slightly more contemporary way. The candlelit service is in Old South’s stunning Gordon Chapel, which is largely stripped of trappings like organs and clerical vestments and is centered on community, simplicity, and the table—both a communion table during the service and a shared meal afterward. A small band, led by Audrey Woodhams (’26), Thursday Night Church’s creative director, plays music that is acoustic and radio friendly. (Recent services have featured songs by Coldplay and Teddy Swims.) A reflection from one of the ministers (not a sermon) is uplifting, practical, and theological. Prayer requests are spoken aloud into a mic that is passed between worshippers. Queer attendees are always specifically welcomed and affirmed from the front of the chapel. A website describing Thursday Night Church, which the congregation launched in the spring of 2024, says the service is for “those hurt by closed minds and closed doors.”

Plans for the revamped service began in late 2023, spearheaded by ministers Ashley Popperson (’14, SSW’14) and Rachel Barton (’23). “We spent a lot of time in prayer and conversation to try and discern the needs of the city,” Barton says of those early planning meetings. “The things we came up with were around longing to create spaces for vulnerability in community. We talked a lot about the epidemic of loneliness, particularly for younger folks. I think the pandemic tore up a bunch of ways that people knew how to connect with and relate to one another, and we really wanted to cultivate the opposite of that and make space where people could feel safe to be themselves together.” With church attendance plummeting nationwide and some queer or doubting Christians in search of a community where they are fully embraced, communities like Old South are breaking free of traditional and theological confines to extend radical welcome to seekers and saints alike. It’s a welcome embodied by the first few lines of “Seat at the Table,” the Common Hymnal tune Woodhams leads at the beginning of each Thursday service:

Don’t it feel good to know you’ve always got a place, yeah
A seat at the table that no one can take
I know that this road can be long
But, loved one, we welcome you home.

Ashley Popperson (’14, SSW’14), who began casting a vision for Thursday Night Church in 2023, leads a prayer before communion.
Virtual formation

The sanctuary at Church of the Young Prophets looks like others I’ve sat in: a large chancel, bordered by green plants, in the center of which is a table with communion bread and wine. A place for prayer is off to the side, and pride flags flank a circular stained-glass window at the center front of the room. Instead of pews or rows of chairs, couches are arranged in six semicircles around coffee tables, which hold more communion elements. On a Saturday in October, Rev. J.J. Warren approaches the lectern and greets those who have gathered for church. “We welcome you in the fullness of all of who you are,” says Warren (’22). “All of who you are is celebrated and welcomed and affirmed in this community.” He continues with several instructions for how to engage during the service. “We invite you, if you are in Gather.Town, to use the emoji bar at the bottom of your screen to let us know how you are approaching this time of worship. What are you feeling as you come into this space? In the chat, let us know where in the world you are, and who you are with as you worship with us today.” Emojis pop into the bottom left of my screen indicating feelings of anxiety, happiness, silliness. Members report in the chat that they are logging on from Oklahoma, Illinois, and elsewhere. Warren signed in from Vienna, Austria, where he lives with his husband and is pursuing a PhD. That’s right: Church of the Young Prophets is not built with bricks and mortar, but pixels and bytes. Members assemble each Saturday from seven countries using Gather.Town, a virtual meeting space that allows groups to customize it to their own needs and greet each other using avatars they control with their keyboard arrows. A Zoom-like video chat window shows each person’s face, unless they choose to remain off camera. Today, we’re in the sanctuary, but during the week church members and volunteers meet privately with Warren in his virtual office, sit around a shared table, walk the prayer labyrinth, or sing karaoke on the church’s rooftop lounge. A congregational channel on the gaming app Discord keeps the conversation and prayers going throughout the week—especially for Australian members who are asleep when the church is holding its Saturday church service.

Church of the Young Prophets uses the online platform Gather.Town for its weekly church services, which include prayers, songs, readings, communion, and a sermon.
“We’re still here”

Church of the Young Prophets was born following a speech Warren delivered advocating for LGBTQIA+ inclusion at the United Methodist Church’s 2019 General Conference, where the denomination reasserted its restrictions on queer members and clergy. LGBTQIA+ Methodists from around the world began to reach out to Warren, who was still working on an MDiv at STH, to express their concerns and hopes. To feel less alone. “I really felt this calling to create a space for us as our denomination was furthering harm against LGBTQ people, to create a space where young queer people could gather and say, ‘We’re still here,’” Warren tells me in an interview. They called themselves the Young Prophets Collective and initially gathered monthly on Zoom as something of a support group, facilitated by Warren and cocreator Alyssa Kuebler (’22). Over time, the group turned into a yearlong, global cohort of queer activists and ministry leaders working to “empower the people who were being disempowered by the church.” “We would work together for a year, and they would identify an injustice in their community, and then we’d work together to say, ‘How might you meet that need?’” Warren says. It was an opportunity to take theories Warren and Kuebler were learning at STH, like asset-based community development and liberation theologies, “distilling them into an accessible way for mostly lay leadership,” Warren says. UMC bishops have since voted to reverse course and formally embraced the queer community; the Young Prophets Collective is supported financially by the UMC’s New England Conference. But the virtual congregation remains vital to its members—a few of whom are in countries where living openly as queer persons is dangerous or illegal. This is why Warren makes a point of limiting who can attend to those who affirm LGBTQIA+ people and beginning each service with a statement celebrating the queerness in the room. “At a lot of churches, especially for queer people, you experience shame when you walk in,” Warren says. “Even the act of walking into a church can be triggering, so we are very explicit in the fact that we start every service with, ‘All of who you are is celebrated.’”

“I really felt this calling to create a space for us as our denomination was furthering harm against LGBTQ people, to create a space where young queer people could gather and say, ‘We’re still here.’” —J.J. Warren

Designing a space of welcome

In thinking about what the respective services would look and feel like, leaders of both Thursday Night Church and Church of the Young Prophets say they started with a vision of the people they wanted to serve. Old South’s Thursday Night Church was born out of Jazz Worship, a vibrant, music-forward expression that drew a different crowd than those who showed up for one of two Sunday morning services. When longtime musician Willie Sordillo announced in 2023 that he would be moving on from leading the Thursday service, Old South leaders assembled a “dreaming team,” which began to imagine a format change. Barton joined the ministry staff just as Popperson began holding visioning meetings for the future of Thursday worship. “We spent a lot of time in discernment and got to a strong sense that there was a community of people who likely had grown up in the church—either the Evangelical or the Catholic Church—and that those folks had not been able to find a place that they could call home, be themselves, and be welcome, but also deeply resonate with the music and the shape of the service,” Barton says. To shape that service, Old South tapped Woodhams—a Nashville-trained songwriter and worship leader who is pursuing an MDiv at STH. About a year into the revamped service, Barton says, around 60 percent of those attending are new faces and “largely exactly the people we were hoping to make a service for: younger folks, queer folks, young professionals, students coming into the city.” Like the leaders of Old South Church, Warren sought input from the community instead of building the church on his own preconceived notions of what it should be. He describes the Church of the Young Prophets as cocreated. One virtual service led to a four-week test run, after which Warren elicited feedback, which has led to a weekly service (and numerous other gatherings throughout the week) for two years. Services include prayers written by church members, both traditional hymns and contemporary worship songs, scripture readings, Warren’s mini-sermon, and conversation around the couches. “We’re constantly trying to reclaim different parts of the Christian tradition a little bit,” Warren says. He firmly believes their space is every bit as much a church—in all its pixelated glory—as the one with a steeple in the center of town. “Jesus says, ‘Where two or three are gathered in my name, I am among them,’” Warren says. “If we say, ‘Yeah, this meant something 2,000 years ago,’ how could we possibly say Jesus is not present here? Who are we to put a box on God and say that God could not be present through the media that we’re encountering here?”

Children and Youth Ministry Coordinator, Part Time, St. John’s Episcopal Church, Jamaica Plain: Jamaican Plain, MA

Job Title: Children and Youth Ministry Coordinator
Job Description
St. John’s Episcopal Church, Jamaica Plain is hiring a part-time Children and Youth Ministry Coordinator to nurture and grow our faith formation offerings for our children and families. We are a small, vibrant, welcoming and inclusive parish. The Children and Youth Ministry Coordinator is a vital part of our staff, working as part of a team of fellow staff members and volunteers under the direct supervision of the rector. St. John’s is a creative congregation and this job is both an excellent place to learn about faith formation and to exercise your creativity in a supportive environment. The ideal candidate has a positive, can-do approach, communicates well both in written and oral forms, is a skilled organizer and planner, and is able both to collaborate with others and to work independently.
The Setting
St. John’s Church is a eucharistically-based faith community of neighbors and families
celebrating different understandings of the Christian faith within the Episcopal Church. As we
live out our call to be the body of Christ in the world, we strive to be a beacon
of justice-seeking and creativity, and to honor St. Benedict’s teaching: “Let all who enter here be received as Christ.” Located in the vibrant Jamaica Plain neighborhood of Boston, we are part of a diverse, welcoming and exciting neighborhood. Average Sunday worship at St. John’s attendance is 60 people in the program year, 30 in the summer months, with approximately 120 active members of all ages.
As a small parish experiencing growth, the Children and Youth Ministry Coordinator will be a part of a team developing and implementing faith formation opportunities to meet the shifting needs of families. It is exciting and challenging, providing the opportunity for personal growth alongside nurturing the growth of others.

Job Responsibilities
Plan and participate in leading Sunday School lessons for school age children
Participate in bi-monthly Youth Group meetings outside Sunday morning (time TBD)
Help coordinate and participate in First Friday Parish Family Nights, including promoting
and inviting parishioners to the events and the planning and leading of activities
Recruit and equip team of Church School teachers; includes coordinating training of
adults to teach
Meet regularly meetings with Church School teachers and volunteers
Coordinate acquisition and maintenance of Church School curriculum, teaching
materials and supplies
In partnership with the rector, oversee the use of the Church School budget and funds
Coordinate maintenance of activity boxes and children’s shelves in the narthex
Communicate regularly with families about lessons, activities, schedules, etc.
Coordinate childcare providers for Sunday mornings and special events
Team with rector to develop and promote vision of intergenerational and lifelong faith
formation in the parish
Support parents and welcome new families to the parish
Develop a Church School calendar and flyer for the start of the program year
Be present on Sunday mornings of program year - time off to be negotiated
Oversee registration and maintenance of church school records
Manage and organize special events of the Sunday School program year, including
Christmas Pageant, Easter Egg Hunt, and End-of-Year Picnic
Use social networking and electronic media to expand and enhance the program,
including Constant Contact, Squarespace, and Google Docs
Communicate regularly with Rector, Staff and Vestry

Package Details
Part-time position.
$20/hour for 10 hours/week. Except for Sunday mornings, hours are flexible.
Two weeks paid vacation.
The position is for mid-September to mid-June, with a start date of September 15. Position may be renewed each September.
No other benefits.

Qualifications
The ideal candidate will have:
An Associate’s degree or equivalent experience
Experience with teaching, classroom management, and/or youth programs
Excellent interpersonal skills and rapport with children, youth, and families
Strong organizational and time management skills, with the ability to prioritize and
delegate
Strong communication and networking skills, especially with online and social media
Working knowledge of computer applications: spreadsheets, documents, email, etc.
Commitment to Christian faith and teaching. If not an Episcopalian, the candidate will be willing to learn and support our tradition.
Candidates with experience teaching the Godly Play children’s formation program and/or the Journey to Adulthood youth ministry program will be given special consideration
A CORI check and completion of Safe Church training will be required

To Apply
Send cover letter and resume by September 1, 2025 to:
Children and Youth Ministry Coordinator Job Search via email (info@stjohns-jp.org)
or regular mail
St. John’s Episcopal Church
PO Box 300230
Jamaica Plain, MA 02130 Rev. 07.10.25

For Information, Click Here