» Anyone for TEE?

Anyone for TEE?

Tee Class

This report from Kristen Hiller via Guy Muse in Ecuador:

Sunlight pours through the glass ceiling of the Fundacion Clemencia, flooding the great room where a small cluster of elderly residents clap their hands and sing: “Santo, santo, santo!” or “Holy, holy, holy!”

Had Jose and Adriana Salazar not taken in these abandoned elderly in Ecuador, they probably would not have gotten food, shelter, and a chance to hear the Gospel.

The Salazars have spent the past five years establishing the Fundacion Clemencia, where they minister to the neglected elderly of Guayaquil, while also balancing their own theological studies.

Since 2003, a partnership between International Mission Board missionaries, workers with Serving In Mission, and national church planters has produced the Theological Education by Extension (TEE) program allowing people like the Salazars to study theology while leading house churches.

“TEE is really filling a need that’s not being filled by the traditional seminary approach,” says Guy Muse, IMB strategy coordinator for this part of Ecuador. “Our goal, of course, is that we would like to see everybody, every single believer, trained theologically.”

As opposed to the traditional seminary approach, TEE allows students to stay in their local churches, study at their own pace, and meet each week for discussion and lecture, Muse explains.

“We don’t train and then send out,” Muse says. “We send out and then train church leaders as they actually do the work.”

The TEE curriculum is comprised of four levels of study, each taking about two years to complete. TEE enrollment averages between 70 and 100 students, who meet at various times and places throughout the week.

Those who have completed earlier levels of the program now teach others who are new to theological study.

Although Muse and other missionaries initially served as instructors in the program, TEE in Guayaquil is now led almost entirely by Ecuadorian church planters.

“As national believers completed levels, missionaries just stepped out of doing all the teaching,” he explains. For the program to continue long-term, Muse says it must be led by national teachers.

After studying in both a traditional seminary as well as the TEE program, house church leader Carlos Perez Flores says the TEE curriculum is a better match for the social and economic reality of the Ecuadorian people.

Xavier Alvarado, president of the Ecuadorian Baptist Convention, says only 20 percent of pastors in the convention have received any kind of theological training. By using the TEE program, Muse says 90 percent of those leading house churches have been trained.

Flores says that since national believers must work at secular jobs in addition to their ministry roles, TEE allows them to further their theological training while providing for their families in a secular workplace.

“If we want to reach the multitudes we need people who are able to transfer practical concepts to people’s lives,” Flores says. “We must be able to train others who also have families and work, and who also want to serve the Lord themselves.”

Muse estimates only one in 10,000 of those living in Guayaquil have the financial and social means needed to attend a traditional, live-in seminary.

“That’s not the world these people are living in,” Muse says. “We need to take theological education to them. No one’s neglecting theological education—it’s just a different way of doing it.”

Kristen’s report left me wondering if anyone has adapted TEE for training church planters in the West. . .

5 Responses to “Anyone for TEE?” »»

  1. Comment by Guy Muse | 08/23/06 at 3:11 am

    “...if anyone has adapted TEE for training church planters in the West…” Good question. I too would be interested to hear of any TEE models being used in the West. One of the issues we get into with the TEE is to be careful that it not be substituted for discipleship. Discipleship is a lifestyle of obedience to the commands of Christ. TEE is more on-going theological training for those church planters out in the harvest. Some have even questioned whether we should even bother with TEE. Our response is that in our context BOTH are needed.

  2. Comment by Monty Winters | 08/23/06 at 7:50 am

    In the late 1970’s, when TEE was hot in missiological circles, the Christian and Missionary Alliance sent Dan Wetzel, president of a small, struggling Native American Bible school in Minnesota down to Central America for several months to study what was happening in TEE. Whe he returned, Dan led the development of Alliance Centers for Theological Study (ACTS), which used a TEE-approach to training pastors and lay-pastors in North America. Over the years, the center morphed into an Office of Alternative Education, and later was incorporated into today’s Church Leadership Academy. A unique featrue of this particular TEE-approach (and one reason it was overlooked by most educational institutions) was its focus on second-language groups in North America. Today, over 3,000 of its North American students are training in Cambodian and Vietnamese languages, and the programmed materials that were developed are used in other similar programs in Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, and China.

    The specific format of TEE (described by Ralph Winter as “a rail fence” or by Fred Holland as “a railroad track” is not common, but the principles have heavily influenced many of the distance education programs available today.

  3. Comment by Steve | 08/24/06 at 11:44 am

    Monty, thanks for information. Is there a website to direct people to?

  4. Comment by Steve | 08/25/06 at 2:15 pm

    This just came in via email from Monty Winters:

    Their site is at http://www.cmalliance.org/ncm/cla/cla.jsp

    Note that the “Basic Training” is the evolution (some would say “de-evolution”) of the original TEE program. As originally conceived, it had three levels: a lay training level, a lay pastor training level, and a ordination track. Today’s Basic training is all that remains, and the Ministerial Study program is really just a self-study program with some mentoring.

    The primary content materials, still used today, is the Compendium of Pastoral Study, originally produced by a group of evangelical Anglican missionaries in Chile (Tony Barrett, and later his son, Terry Barrett). The basic six-volume set is an inductive study of the book of Matthew, which manages to touch on nearly all the critical pastoral skills. The books were produced by the Seminary by Extension for All Nations, or SEAN, and were used by a wide range of denominations and groups. They were simple lineal programming, with the answers to each frame at the bottom of the page. The Alliance assisted in translating them into some nine languages (I know at least one translation is still going on in Raday, one of the Montagnard (Dega) languages, by a pastor in the Dallas area).

    The real problem with TEE for Western thinkers is in giving equal weight to the three elements of the model. We give lip service to mentoring and group learning, but find it hard to “grade” group discussion and in-ministry behavior, much less consider them equal thirds of our training.

    (Note: I responded with an email, since that is the way your question came, but feel free to post this on the blog as a reply if you’d like)

    Dr. Monty L. Winters
    Asst. to the Supt./ Church Multiplication Ministries
    Southwestern District/The C&MA

  5. Comment by Michael Huggins | 09/09/06 at 1:50 am

    Responding to your question I would recommend this UK initiative by Jacqui Brown, Director SEAN UK admin@sean.uk.net

    “TRAINING – A VISION FOR LIFE

    “October 6th-8th Friday-Sunday 2006

    “We invite you to join us at Weycroft Hall to explore together the challenge of discipleship and training in the UK. drawing from International and UK experience and bringing together the vision and strategy of the tool of SEAN so that it can benefit your local Church situation.

    “The events will be tailored to meet the needs of those who are looking at discipleship within their local church, those who are already involved in TEE/SEAN material and would like a fresh look at its methodology and benefits and those who would like to take a discipleship tool on the mission field.
    The events will be held at…........

    Weycroft Hall….http://www.task-centre.org.uk/welcome.htm
    “Weycroft Hall is the home to 3 organisations, SEAN UK, Axminster TASK Centre and the newly formed Matheteuo. All of these organisations have developed from the foundation of Axminster Christian Fellowship (ACF), a Church planted through evangelism and TEE, and meeting peoples needs in a practical way on a local housing estate.

    “Mobilised and equipped through the SEAN programme, ACF is a testimony to how ordinary people can be trained as a vision for life, for both spiritual growth and for action within the local community and beyond. Matheteuo has been created to support the expanding needs worldwide for effective TEE training. It’s own mission statement is to develop the basis for an intercultural TEE curriculum, to draw together international training teams to conduct TEE seminars and workshops, to establish and manage a “seed fund” for the secure launching of National TEE programmes and to establish a “Global TEE Resource Centre”. Dr John Stott is Patron of SEAN UK and Matheteuo.”

    COST
    There will be a cost of £80 per person to these events which will include accommodation at Weycroft Hall, all food and refreshments and the training.

    SEAN UK website is http://www.sean.uk.net/

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