Often when I look back at the things I've done in my life, it seems like I'm looking at the accomplishments of a different person. I'm so much more impressive on paper than I feel in real life. I think it was John Lennon who said that "life is what happens while we're making other plans," but in my life I've successfully achieved many of my lifetime goals, but I still don't feel any different than I did when I was 17. OK, maybe that's not entirely true. Hell, it's not even a little true....
In any event, apparently I'm a pretty amazing guy, but no one is more amazed by this than me. So before I try to introduce you to the "real" me, here I am on paper (along with a few explanatory comments which I hope will help put it all in context).
***
AN ANNOTATED CURRICULUM VITA
Rev. Dr. Timothy Ward Jensen
109 Church Street, Carlisle MA 01741
(978) 369-0284; (503) 816-2859 (cellular)
timothy_jensen@post.harvard.edu
EDUCATION
Doctor of Philosophy in American History (June 16, 2001)
University of Oregon, Eugene, OR
Dissertation title: "The Wares: Three Generations of American Unitarians"
Earning a doctoral degree had been a goal of mine since I was a sophomore in High School. That year I was fortunate enough to have two excellent teachers, Fred Metzer for Beginning Speech and Donald Cummings for English, both of whom had PhDs, and who together profoundly influenced the subsequent direction of my life. My own doctoral studies basically revolved around two related questions: one personal, the other academic and professional. “Am I capable of writing a substantial book, and still having a life?” And the second is like unto it: “How did the Unitarian Universalist ministry come to be the way that it is today?” My answer to the first question turned out to be a qualified “yes” — provided I am willing to make the discipline of writing a significant part of that life. The second question remains a subject of considerable curiosity to me: the more I learn, the more questions I discover as well.
I usually describe my academic field as “19th-century American Religious History,” but my interests are far more eclectic, and include the history of the professions in general and their role in American society, the sociology of religion, the relationship between religion and literature, as well as more traditional themes of social history such as race, class, and gender/sexuality. My elective coursework and teaching assignments (described below) likewise acquainted me with topics such as environmental history, the history of the American West, radical labor history, even military history. Finally, much to my surprise and for the first time in my life, I was a “straight A student” at the University of Oregon — ironic, since by that point in my education the grades had stopped meaning anything to me anymore anyway, and I was at long last learning solely for the love of knowledge itself.
Master of Arts Interdisciplinary Studies [MAIS] - American Studies (March 22, 1996) (US Intellectual History, American Literature, Philosophy of Religion)
Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR
I enrolled at Oregon State primarily for the opportunity to study with two professors whose work I admire very much: Unitarian historian and Emerson scholar David Robinson, and New Testament scholar and “Jesus Seminar” member Marcus Borg (for whom I also worked as a Graduate Teaching Assistant). Having been out of college for nearly a decade, I wasn’t certain how I was going to react to being back in school again. The answer is that I took to it like a Duck to water: in this instance, the still, deep water of a secluded pond created by a small but active colony of busy Beavers.
Master of Arts in English/Creative Writing (June 8, 1984)
Western Washington University, Bellingham, WA
I enrolled in this program after first being hired by WWU to work as a Residence Hall Director (see below), because I wanted to study creative writing with Annie Dillard, and needed to be a degree candidate in order to be allowed to register for her workshop. I left the job after only a year, but continued on to complete the requirements for the degree, eventually defending my thesis the following year while working as an intern minister at University Unitarian Church in Seattle.
Master of Divinity [MDiv] (June 4, 1981)
Harvard University Divinity School, Cambridge, MA
I took all the “standard” courses every Divinity Student SHOULD take: Old and New Testament, Church History, Theology, Ethics, World Religions. I also studied (and eventually failed, although I did learn enough to pass the required language exam) two years of Koine Greek, which in retrospect has turned out to have had a tremendous impact on my subsequent ministry and theological orientation. The two professors who had the greatest influence on me at the time were Unitarian historian C. Conrad Wright, and my advisor Sharon Parks, a student of James Fowler’s who works in Adolescent Faith Development. I also took a large number of “practical” courses, in part to try to compensate for my relative youth (I was only 21 when I enrolled at Harvard; 24 when I graduated), and completed twice the required amount of Field Education. Rhys Williams, my field education supervisor at the First and Second Church in Boston, was my first and one of my most important mentors in ministry.
Bachelor of Arts in English (June 10, 1978 )
(with Distinction and Departmental Honors)
University of Washington, Seattle, WA
Growing up in Seattle as the eldest son of a Dawg, I never seriously considered attending college anywhere other than the University of Washington, and the fact that I was initially “wait-listed” there proved a powerful incentive to apply myself diligently to my studies once I was eventually accepted. Since that time I have been a Duck, a Beaver, a Viking and a Crimson, but in my heart-of-hearts I will always bleed Purple and Gold. In addition to my normal undergraduate coursework, I also worked two years as a Residence Hall Advisor, wrote briefly for the UW Daily, and participated in a variety of intramural sports: touch football, basketball, softball, and volleyball. My volleyball team actually won the University “co-recreational” (mixed men’s and women’s) championship my Junior year, and I think I may still even have the T-shirt to prove it! I became an English major by accident; after completing my first two years of elective coursework, I discovered that I had already fulfilled two-thirds of the requirements for an English degree, and was invited by the Department to participate in their Honors program, which meant maintaining a certain grade point average, enrolling in two additional Honors seminars (one of which I had already taken), and writing a Senior thesis, in my case a highly forgettable, post-moderenesque commentary on Joseph Campbell’s The Masks of God. The designation “with Distinction” was the UW’s plain English equivalent of Cum Laude, although now that my alma mater is widely recognized as a “public ivy,” I think they may have gone back to Latin. In any event, it was an honor that I was not even aware that I had earned until my diploma arrived in the mail 8-12 weeks following Commencement.
PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE
Parish Ministry:
Settled Parish Minister
The First Religious Society in Carlisle
Carlisle, MA (since 2003)
Carlisle is an affluent exurban bedroom community located “over the river and through the woods” just beyond the famous Old North Bridge in historic Concord, approximately a 45 minute drive from downtown Boston. Yet it retains much of the look and feel of the rural agricultural village it was just a few generations ago. Outstanding schools and ample conservation land contribute to its attractiveness as a community. The First Religious Society occupies a traditional white-steepled New England meeting house overlooking the town common high on a hill in the center of town. I immediately fell in love with this church and its people the moment I met them, and actually turned down a more lucrative (six-figure) offer from another, larger congregation in order to settle here. I live in a parsonage next door to the meeting house, approximately seven miles (as the crow flies) from the site of Thoreau’s cabin at Walden Pond. A brief walk through the woods behind my house takes me to the town library, the post office, and a small country store where one may purchase coffee, muffins, hot soup and sandwiches, along with all the other easily overlooked conveniences of daily living. The school is immediately across the street; the Town Hall, Police Station and Firehouse all a brief walk across the common in the opposite direction.
The formal organization of the First Religious Society actually preceeded the legal incorporation of the Town of Carlisle by about half a century, and the congregation continues to see itself as the “heart and soul” of the Carlisle community. We engage in an active public ministry to the residents of the town, hosting an annual Harvest Fair, a Christmas Greens Sale, and a summer Strawberry Festival as well as providing meeting space for numerous community groups ranging from the Council on Aging to the Girl Scouts. We also share space with the Red Balloon Preschool (founded by church members some 35 years ago), and sponsor numerous lectures, concerts, and other programs of community interest throughout the year. We are an enthusiastic Habitat for Humanity Covenant Congregation, and support a long-established volunteer outreach ministry in Lowell.
I've been at FRS long enough now that my parishioners are starting to figure out that I don’t walk on water, or change water into wine; that I can’t be everywhere at once (or even two places at the same time); that I don’t read minds or know everything there is to know without first being told (and often reminded as well, sometimes more than once); and that no matter how hard they may pray otherwise, I personally am powerless to solve every difficult problem little or large that comes into our lives, or to create Something out of Nothing by Word alone. A few may have been a little disappointed at first (especially about the water into wine part), but I think they're starting to get used to the idea. For my own part, despite having "settled" in the congregation of my dreams, I often struggle with how spiritually and emotionally demanding this work of ministry can be, and am often pleasantly surprised by how regularly and routinely "my people" pick me up again.
Interim Minister,
Second Congregational Meeting House Society (Unitarian),
Nantucket, MA (2001-2003)
Nantucket is truly a unique (and special) place. There are approximately 8,000 permanent “year-round” residents living on the island, but that number can swell to 50,000+ on a sunny, summer weekend. The “Faraway Island” is a quaint, historical community, a playground for the wealthy, idolized for its lovely beaches and preserved open spaces, now facing the burgeoning problems of too much traffic, a serious lack of affordable housing, and sprawl. “South Church” itself is both an historic landmark and a Nantucket icon; its golden dome and clock tower loom prominently over the town, and are clearly visible from the harbor and many other places on the island.
My principle challenge and most important accomplishment as an interim minister was to help cultivate a collaborative and mutually supportive collegial relationship with the legendary and much-beloved minister emeritus, who had served the Nantucket congregation for 29 years, and continues to live on the island (where he is deservedly revered by the larger community and enjoys a very active retirement). The congregation had already experienced one “failed” interim ministry prior to my arrival, which left them feeling badly divided and fearful that they would never be able to attract a permanent candidate to settle there. My experience, however, was overwhelmingly positive. I developed both an excellent working and a close personal relationship with the minister emeritus, which both protected the integrity of his retirement and allowed him to create a new role for himself as a regular member of the congregation (and one of my strongest and most important supporters). Attendance increased, and the congregation began to feel revitalized and eager to explore fresh new directions in ministry. I was also able to establish my own presence and identity in the larger community, and to work effectively in partnership with the lay leadership of the society to strengthen their ties to the denomination and put into place a program and administrative infrastructure appropriate to the needs of a dynamic, “pastoral”-sized congregation. What was the old-fashioned secret of my success? Good preaching, plenty of pastoral visitation, respect for local customs and traditions, and a profound understanding of our historical polity and its practical applications within a contemporary church community. Oh yes, and hard work, a healthy sense of humor, personal spiritual and religious authenticity, and regular prayer....
Consulting Minister,
Umpqua UU Church,
Roseburg, OR (1/2 time, 2000-01)
I won’t claim to have “invented” Consulting Ministry, but I certainly put my stamp on the way it is practiced in the PNWD. The basic arrangement is generally one or two long weekends a month, together with a newsletter column and regular phone and e-mail contact as needed. The idea is to provide small congregations without a regularly settled minister with a consistent ministerial presence, as well as an opportunity to draw upon the minister’s professional expertise while working toward a set of pre-determined goals: typically more inspirational worship, better visitor hospitality and membership growth, and an improved every member canvass. It’s an imperfect arrangement for everyone involved, but it does frequently provide a stepping-stone to something more satisfactory somewhere down the line.
Each of my consulting ministries has been a little different, but the one factor they all share is that they required a considerable amount of travel on my part: over 237,000 miles (as registered on the odometer of my green ‘93 Ford Escort wagon) in the eight years I served as an itinerant “circuit rider.” Yet I learned things from this style of ministry that I could never have learned anywhere else, and the experience also proved a very nice compliment to my doctoral studies and my work as a Graduate Teaching Fellow.
Consulting Minister,
UU Congregation of Whidbey Island,
Freeland, WA (1/4 time, 2000-01)
Perhaps my favorite of all the congregations I consulted with (if clergy are allowed to have "favorites"), as well as the experience which inspired me to accept the interim position on Nantucket. During my tenure UUCWI purchased land, and began raising money toward the construction of their own building.
Consulting Minister,
Wy'east UU Congregation,
Portland, OR (1/2 time, 1998-99)
Because of its relative proximity to my home, this was more like a regular half-time settlement than a true consulting ministry. I helped organize a campus ministry program at nearby Reed College (a simple task, since all of the real work was done by the students themselves, including two who are now colleagues: Thom Belote and Marc Lousteau), facilitated a coming-of-age program in cooperation with the Atkinson Memorial Church in Oregon City, and also was available to attend some evening meetings during the week. During my tenure there, Wy’east applied for and was accepted into the UUA Extension Ministry program, and in the fall of 1999 they received a full-time Extension Minister.
Consulting Minister,
Olympic UU Fellowship,
Port Angeles, WA (1/4 time, 1997-99)
At the conclusion of my two-year relationship with this congregation, they entered into a half-time contract with another consulting minister, and were moving toward construction of a new building on land they already owned. The building was dedicated in the spring of 2001.
Consulting Minister,
UU Fellowship of Central Oregon,
Bend, OR (1/4 time, 1996-97)
Bend was probably the most frustrating and disappointing of my consulting ministries; it was a long, scary drive over the mountains in winter, with not much to show for my efforts once I arrived. They were all good people, but unfortunately there was very little consensus or clairty about what they expected out of the church or my ministry there, and my ability to help them suffered as a result.
Summer Minister,
First Unitarian Church,
Portland, OR (Summer, 1996)
This was a brief taste for me of what it might be like to be the Senior Minister of a large, multi-staff downtown Church. I decided that I liked it. Obviously, summer is a little different from the regular program year; my basic responsibilities were to preach, to work with the excellent lay pastoral care team, to lead a weekly staff meeting for whoever was not on vacation, to officiate at weddings, and to deal with whatever other routine emergencies happened to spring up. The excellent office administrator kept me pointed in the right direction, my sermons were very well received, and on Labor Day I returned Marilyn’s pulpit back to her none the worse for wear.
Consulting Minister,
Skagit UU Fellowship,
Mount Vernon, WA (1/4 time, 1993-95)
The first of my six consulting ministries had its genesis when I was asked at the eleventh hour to substitute for a colleague who was compelled to cancel a preaching engagement. The congregation apparently liked what they heard, so the Church President, knowing that my mother lived only twenty minutes away, suggested that I might want to visit her more often. Two years later, having already moved twice to accommodate growth, Skagit was ready to buy a building of their own, and at the same time entered into a half-time relationship with another UU minister whose actual residence was much closer than mine.
Extension/New Congregation Minister,
Unitarian Universalist Community Church,
Hillsboro, OR (1988 -90)
Despite its difficulties, the challenge of working with a “start-up” church was also exhilarating on many levels, and I remain especially proud of the fact that this congregation essentially doubled in size (from 64 to 125 members) during the first eighteen months of my ministry there. The outreach techniques I learned through my Extension training and practiced in Hillsboro I later adapted for use as a consulting minister, with equally excellent results. I also learned quite a bit about the nature of church conflict, as the "pioneers" who had first started this congregation began to resent the "newcomers" who were rapidly beginning to outnumber them, and blamed me for trying to "take over" their congregation and change everything. It was in the aftermath of this experience that I began to ask myself for the first time some of the subtle questions about the nature of clerical authority and the “professionalization” of ministry which subsequently informed my doctoral research. If it never breaks down, you never learn how to fix it.
Settled Parish Minister,
Unitarian Universalist Church,
Midland, TX (1985 -88)
Despite occasionally joking that Midland is located “in the center of Texas and the middle of nowhere,” from a professional standpoint this church was a very good first settlement for me, and in retrospect I wish that I could have convinced my wife to stay there longer than we did. At the time I compared living in Texas to living in a foreign country, yet I also tried to resist the temptation to think and act like an “ugly Ecotopian,” judging everything I saw around me by my own pre-existing liberal values rather than attempting to experience and understand the culture according to its own lights. Likewise, as the only settled UU minister between Fort Worth and El Paso, Austin and Albuquerque, my presence was certainly much appreciated by my “flock,” even if they were relatively few in number. I was welcomed as a member of the mainline, ecumenical religious community, enjoyed my work as a volunteer hospital emergency room chaplain and with other community organizations like Planned Parenthood, and felt especially grateful for the opportunity to participate in Prairie Group, and the various activities of the Southwest District.
Intern Minister,
University Unitarian Church,
Seattle, WA (1983 -84)
My internship at University Church was somewhat unorthodox, in that I had already been ordained for two years at the time I started there. But because of my relative youth, the Ministerial Fellowship Committee had stipulated that I must either complete a year-long resident internship, or else restrict myself to settlement as an assistant or associate minister before becoming eligible to be called to a pulpit of my own. Peter Raible generously offered me the opportunity to fulfill that requirement by working with him. In actual substance, my “internship” probably differed little from that of any other intern, except that I assumed some additional pastoral and administrative responsibilities for the nearby Shoreline Unitarian Church under the terms of a year-long joint operating agreement with UUC.
Field Education Student Intern,
The First and Second Church in Boston,
Boston, MA (1978-81)
I worked at First and Second Church all three years I spent at Harvard, was ordained there the Sunday following my graduation, and continue to feel a very special affinity for that congregation twenty-five years later (notwithstanding my disappointment that they have recently voted to drop "Second Church" from the letterhead). This was my first real experience in the role of “minister,” and I could not have asked for a better role model than Rhys Williams.
Intern Chaplain (Clinical Pastoral Education),
Virginia Mason Hospital,
Seattle, WA (Summer 1979)
My unit of Basic CPE was an intensive, eleven week summer internship at a highly respected acute care hospital in my home town of Seattle. In addition to this important exposure to the practice of hospital minsitry, I also learned a significant lesson about the concept of "opportunity cost." In order to complete this required internship and be certain of graduating from Divinity School in the prescribed three year sequence, I turned down an opportunity to travel through Europe that summer instead, free of charge, in the company of a truly extraordinary woman I’d been dating at Harvard, who worked for Harvard Student Agencies, publisher of the famous "Let’s Go" guidebooks. She found a more amiable traveling companion, and I earned my degree right on schedule; yet I’ve often wondered how different my life might have been, had I been willing to take the chance of making the “irresponsible” choice.
College and University Teaching:
Graduate Teaching Fellow in History, University of Oregon,
Eugene, OR (1997-01)
A large measure of the actual classroom instruction at institutions like the University of Oregon is done by Graduate Teaching Assistants, who serve as discussion section leaders for large undergraduate lecture classes. Because of my previous academic preparation, I was often pressed into service as the “utility historian;” my teaching assignments included not only HIST 201, 202, 203 United States History, but also HIST 101 Western Civilization, HIST 301, 303 Modern Europe, HIST 351 American Radicalism, HIST 240 War in the Modern World, and HIST 399 Special Studies: WWII on Film.
Visiting Scholar in American History, Aalborg University,
Aalborg, Denmark (Spring, 2000)
This was a unique opportunity which I simply couldn’t pass up. I spent the better part of a semester as a visiting doctoral student in Denmark, then traveled for a month in France, Italy and Germany before returning to the U.S.
Visiting Instructor in Religious Studies, University of Oregon,
Eugene, OR (Spring, 1998).
Shortly after advancing to candidacy, I went on leave from the Graduate School for a term in order to work as an adjunct Professor of Religious Studies, covering part of the teaching load of the program chair during his sabbatical. I taught two courses: REL 111 Introduction to the Study of the Bible, and REL 323 Modern Western Christianity.
Graduate Teaching Fellow in Religious Studies, University of Oregon,
Eugene, OR (1996-97).
My first GTF appointment at the UO was in the Religious Studies department. My assignments were REL 111 Introduction to the Study of the Bible, and REL 202 Great Religions of the World.
Graduate Teaching Assistant, Oregon State University,
Corvallis, OR (1994-96)
This was a combined appointment in English and Philosophy. I was Marcus Borg’s personal teaching assistant for PHIL 101 Intro to Philosophy, PHIL 436 Philosophy of Religion, PHIL 443 Environmental Values and Religious World-Views, and PHIL 411/511 Historical Jesus. I also taught five different sections of WR 121 Freshman English, and one of WR 214 Business Writing.
Adjunct Instructor in English, Midland College,
Midland, TX (Spring, 1986)
I took on this job as a favor to a parishioner, who needed someone to cover a class during his sabbatical. I taught one section of ENG 112 Second Semester Freshman English.
General Employment:
Store Manager, B. Dalton Bookseller,
Beaverton, OR (1990-93)
During the time my former wife attended Law School in Portland, I worked as a retail bookseller, beginning as a temporary holiday employee and eventually being promoted up through the ranks to managing an entire store. This is the only job I have ever held as an adult that was not in some way related to the church or academia. I learned a little bit about retail and what it is like to work for a big corporation like Barnes & Noble, and also quite a bit more about managing a business: how to hire, train, and supervise employees, control inventory and expenses, provide good customer service, and at the end of the day still show a profit on the bottom line. I am still quietly proud of that fact that, in my final twelve-months as a bookseller, I turned around a store with a prolonged history of steadily declining sales, and set an annual record for both gross sales and profitability.
Residence Hall Director, Western Washington University,
Bellingham, WA (1981-82)
I found this job through a classified ad in the local Sunday newspaper, and applied for it because I was annoyed by the MFC’s settlement restrictions (previously described), and wanted a little time to get to know my own mind. I was the live-in manager of a 225 student on-campus dormitory, and supervised four undergraduate Resident Assistants.
Odd Jobs and Youthful Avocations (1971-1978)
Ordinarily I wouldn’t include an entry like this in my curriculum vita, but in this context it somehow seems appropriate. In addition to the usual kind of babysitting and lawn mowing jobs, as a kid I also worked in a variety of restaurant positions (waiter, dishwasher, busboy, cashier — but never a cook or bartender), parked cars for tips at the local yacht club, was an umpire/referee for various youth sporting events, the official scorer for a Little League organization, and a member of a surveying crew. My High School activities included Debate, Student Government, various Junior Varsity sports (football, basketball, baseball, track...none of which I particularly excelled at), occasional articles in the student newspaper, and a small part in a student-produced play.
PUBLISHED WRITINGS, CONFERENCE PAPERS, HONORS AND AWARDS
"The Wares: Three Generations of American Unitarians." Unitarian Universalist Scholars Program Dissertation Fellowship Presentation, UUA General Assembly, Salt Lake City, UT, June 1999. This is also the title of my doctoral dissertation, which I successfully defended on May 21, 2001.
Mellon Research Fellowship, Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston MA Summer 2000.
"From Mythos to Merger: a Brief Review of Unitarian and Universalist History" in Redeeming Time: Endowing Your Church with the Power of Covenant. Walter P. Herz, ed. Boston: Skinner House, 1999.
"‘Their own thought in motley…’: Emerson's Divinity School Address and Henry Ware, Jr.'s Hints on Extemporaneous Preaching." Journal of Unitarian Universalist History 24 (1997).
"Experiencing Theodore Parker as a Minister." Collegium of Liberal Religious Scholars, October 1996.
"My nonsense is only their own thought in motley;" Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry Ware, Jr., and the "Nature" of "Christian Character." Masters Thesis, Oregon State University, 1995.
Unitarian Universalist Scholar Fellowship Recipient, 1995-98.
"Associational Covenant: Implicit Models of Relationship Between and Among our Congregations." Prairie Group, November 1988.
"Black Cross" and other Stories. Masters Thesis, Western Washington University, 1983.
Phi Eta Sigma academic honor society.
PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS
Unitarian Universalist Ministers Association (since 1979)
Collegium of Liberal Religious Scholars (on and off since 1980)
Prairie Group (1985-88)
Pacific Northwest District Extension Steering Committee (1998 - 2001)
Board of Directors, Unitarian Universalist Christian Fellowship (1998-2005)
Editorial Board, Unitarian Universalist Christian (since 2001)
Board of Directors, Unitarian Universalist Historical Society (since 2005)
Treasurer, Unitarian Universalist Historical Society (since 2006)
Publications Committee, Unitarian Universalist Historical Society (since 2005)
CONTINUING PROFESSIONAL EDUCATION
UUA Interim Ministry Training, Cleveland OH, June 2001.
Samaritan Family Systems/Parish Leadership Consulting Group, 1989-90.
Alban Institute Conflict Management Workshop, Portland, OR, Mar. 1990.
Alban Institute Church Growth Seminar, Portland OR, Oct. 1989.
UUA Extension Ministry/New Congregation Training, Boston MA, Aug. 1988.
UUA Preaching Seminar, Chicago IL, Aug. 1986.
UUA Start-up Seminar, Palo Alto CA, Feb. 1986.
Pacific Northwest District Basic Leadership School, Summer, 1984
Monday, May 15, 2006
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