Decolonizing Church: Black History Month Edition

January 31 –February 28

This course is for pastors, church planters, faith-based nonprofit leaders, seminary students, faith-based activists and organizers, religious educators, congregational lay leaders, and any leaders who:


Are looking for a fresh, decentralized, and decolonized approach to mission and discipleship.
Want to see how social justice and activism can be at the center of your church's mission and discipleship.
Want to be inspired by stories of ordinary disciples growing in decolonized faith that informs their social action.
Are ready to take away tools and language to share with your church or organization to get started with developing leaders and communities of decolonized practice.


EXPECTATIONS:

Plan to commit around 2-4 hours each week for personal work + live sessions. Erica and Brandon hold optional weekly office hours for participants. We anticipate having approximately 30 participants in the live sessions. We are opening enrollment to more than 30 participants to account for those who will participate in the course asynchronously and the natural dropoff/withdrawals that will occur.

STEP ONE: You will be sent reading materials, an audio/visual element, and reflection activities through email and private Facebook group.

STEP TWO: You will post your response to a short reflection activity in the private Facebook group.

STEP THREE: You will attend a live group conversation about the week's materials with Erica and Brandon Wrencher. Live sessions are each Monday from 7:30 - 8:30pm EDT.



INSTRUCTORS:

Rev. Brandon Wrencher is a minister, organizer, writer, and trainer. He has worked over the last 12 years across the US within faith, education, and non-profit sectors at the intersections of decolonizing church, contemplative activism, and local presence to build beloved communities. He's one of the founders of The Good Neighbor Movement, a faith justice community based in Greensboro, NC that is a network of contemplative activist groups. Brandon is an ordained elder in the Western North Carolina Conference of The United Methodist Church. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Religion from UNC-Chapel Hill, a Master of Divinity from North Park Theological Seminary, and completed post-graduate studies in theology and ethics from Duke Divinity School. Brandon has two forthcoming books in 2022 - Liberating Church: A 21st Century Hush Harbor Manifesto (Wipf & Stock and The Voices Publishing) and Buried Seeds: Learning from the Vibrant Resilience of Marginalized Christian Communities (Baker Academic).

Erica Wrencher is a public educator, speaker, vocalist, and activist working with young folks, churches, and neighborhoods to build beloved communities. For over ten years her teaching and faith-rooted community leadership has spanned urban and rural contexts in North Carolina and Chicago. Erica holds a Bachelor of Arts in History, a Master of Arts in Teaching, and she is currently pursuing a PhD in Educational Leadership and Cultural Foundations at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. She is active as an organizer for racial equity and justice and considers herself a human connection educator. Erica is committed to speaking from her context as a Black woman who is rooted in history and moral witness.

Brandon and Erica are life and love partners with two beautiful and energetic elementary school-aged sons. Together Erica and Brandon founded Wrencher Collaborative LLC, a community-rooted education and consulting project.

The course will also include guest speakers!

PRICE: The cost of the course is $149.99 or pay what you can. More details about the cost are on the registration page.

Contact your instructors with any questions at info@wrenchercollaborative.com.

*Dissident discipleship: a concept we were first introduced to by our mentor Rev. Lynice Pinkard, who we’ll read from in the course.

More details and registration are here.