
Outdoor ministry provides life-changing experience

Macy Kennedy is taking her ministry beyond the pulpit and into God鈥檚 creation. She has found a way to combine her love for the outdoors with her theological education. In September, she will start her position as a program assistant at Rainbow Lutheran Camp in Colorado.
鈥淭hey have a well-known internship in the outdoor ministry world,鈥 Kennedy said. 鈥淓ach month during this internship, I have a specific learning goal. I鈥檒l be helping the program director by making phone calls, traveling and visiting schools and churches and inviting people to attend. I will also learn how to interview and hire staff, prepare a budget and plan a retreat.鈥
The camp attracts school groups, church congregations, young adult ministries and families in addition to summer camp. Kennedy will support those events while also helping the church congregation.
鈥淧art of my role is to bridge the gap between the church and the camp, learning how to use rostered leaders,鈥 Kennedy said.
By the time she finishes the nine-month assignment, Kennedy also will be rostered as a deacon.
Grounded in the Lutheran faith
A lifelong Lutheran, Kennedy graduated May 5, 2022, with a master鈥檚 degree in Christian ministry. Since her childhood, she has been involved in outdoor ministry, attending as a camper and then working at Luther Springs Camp and Conference Center in Florida during the summers of her high school and college years.
鈥淒uring my senior year of undergrad, I considered my vocation, so I worked at Sky Ranch Lutheran Camp, located west of Fort Collins, Colorado,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 wanted to determine if I really love outdoor ministry, or do I just love Luther Springs?鈥

After graduating with her bachelor鈥檚 degree in environmental studies, she completed a transformative, yearlong journey through the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America Young Adults in Global Mission program. She served in Australia at a K-12 school until the global pandemic hit in 2020. During that same time, she discerned a call to ministry to complement her love for the outdoors, which led her to LTSS. After working that summer at Upper Missouri Ministry in North Dakota, she confirmed her calling to outdoor ministry.
鈥淚 sit and just think about how I fell in love with camp as a child,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 this space where you live as God intended us to live. I鈥檝e learned when entering the space, there鈥檚 an instant sense of belonging. I grew up in Luther Springs and that鈥檚 my home; I belong there, and those people are my family. But, when I got to North Dakota and stepped into a leadership role with people I鈥檝e never met, it was another instant sense of belonging.鈥
Seminary impacts life-lasting faith formation
With scholarship support, Kennedy said she focused on personal and professional growth during her two-year master鈥檚 degree program rather than the concern of tuition costs.
鈥淏ecause I鈥檓 working for the church, I feel like the people of the church are supporting me financially both in funds and prayers and for that, I鈥檓 grateful,鈥 she said.
Kennedy also credits the theology courses she completed at LTSS to support a deeper understanding of scripture.
鈥淢y education has helped me understand the Gospels as they are told in an entire story and being able to connect the Old Testament to the New Testament,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut the most valuable thing I鈥檝e learned at the seminary is how to listen to people, like active and compassionate listening. There is a way to build relationships with people while spreading the Gospel message. The seminary has prepared me to do that when I work with the camp staff or church congregation.鈥

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