Looking back on these past four years, what I was taught at WSC
in theory has been lived out, fleshed out in my life. As an
ordained minister, I constantly rely on my seminary training in
my preparation of sermons, Sunday school classes, and Bible
studies. Every week, I comb through Hebrew and Greek texts.
Throughout my seminary studies, my understanding of the Bible
was amplified in studying the original languages, systematic
theology, church history, and practical theology. WSC helped me
to see the Scriptural and confessional basis for our biblical,
Reformed beliefs.
I am thankful for having received an orthodox education from men
who are committed to the Bible and the Reformed confessions.
There was a shared commitment among the faculty to exposit and
apply the Word of God as faithfully as possible. In a culture
that is increasingly belligerent to the Christian faith, adrift
in moral relativism, and awash in consumeristic hedonism, how
many seminaries today can honestly say they affirm such a
commitment?
As I am asked theological and pastoral questions, I not only
rely on notes and outlines taken in class, and books I had
perused for papers, but also the immediate wisdom of my seminary
professors. When certain church members held faulty
understandings of Christ's resurrection, I was thankful to have
been able to return to professors like Dr. Dennis Johnson and
Dr. Joel Kim for help. I am sure my access to them is helped by
my residence in Southern California, but I am thankful for their
continuing availability to me all the same!
I especially hold dear the prayerful and fatherly care of
professors like Dr. Bryan Estelle, Dr. R. Scott Clark and Dr.
Hywel Jones. Their example, teaching, and preaching—even their
confidence in me as a prospective minister who was at times
unsure of his calling—presented to me a model which I seek to
emulate, and a mentorship for which I am deeply grateful.
WSC has taught me to appreciate the Word, Christ's gospel,
and my Christian identity in a churchly, covenantal context.
Ontario United Reformed Church has been my home church for the
past eleven years, nurturing and growing me as a spiritual child
in the faith. This church fed me doctrinal truths and nourished
me with the Word when I was new to the Reformed faith, a young
man right out of college. Ontario URC taught me to serve: I
helped with the prayer ministry, taught Sunday school classes,
and administered mercy as a deacon.
This church also provided the context in which I would meet
and marry my wife, and have the sign and seal of the covenant
applied to my two daughters in baptism. This church supported us
during my time in seminary and sowed the seeds of my ministry
when the church began a Spanish-speaking outreach out of a
conviction to bring the gospel to our neighbors in the city of
Ontario, which is predominantly Latino. The church started
Spanish worship services during my first year of seminary, so I
exhorted on a biweekly basis with Phil Hoadley (WSC '06), who
also exhorted in Spanish (and to whom I am deeply indebted as a
co-laborer).
Having raised me in the faith, this same church called me in
February 2009 to be a minister of the Word and Sacraments in the
United Reformed Churches of North America. Every Lord’s Day I
preach and lead the Spanish service. Afterwards I teach a new
members’ class. During the week, I hold two Spanish Bible
studies as a way to reach out to the Latino community. I also
catechize the youth in the Spanish ministry using the Three
Forms of Unity. The relevance and importance of my seminary
education crystallizes in the act of ministering to the
parishioners. What I learned in seminary was not just
theoretical or abstract ideas that I had jotted down in my
laptop and later reproduced in an exam blue book, they were
ideas of true life and death import. As I have been discipled by
Christ through his bride, the church, so now I am called to do
that unto others. What an honor, what a privilege!
WSC provides a valuable service to Christ’s church by
equipping pastors and teachers who will one day feed God’s
people the meat of the Word. There are very few seminaries with
faculties who are as united and committed to the Reformed faith
as WSC’s faculty. I am thankful that in God’s providence I was
blessed with the education that I received there. It is my
fervent prayer that the seminary would stay true to its mission.
As long as it does, I will not hesitate to recommend WSC to
other prospective seminary students. The harvest field is great,
and the workers are few. May God continue to provide for all of
the seminary’s needs as it faithfully trains more workers to go
into the harvest field.
Ruben Sernas (M.Div., 2008) was ordained on February 15,
2009, as Minister of Word and Sacraments for the Spanish
ministry at Ontario United Reformed Church (www.spanishurc.org).
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