Carleton student ministries kick off the school year with renewed prayer and unity
“Our hope was that it would set the tone for the year.”
Craig Macartney
Spur Ottawa Writer
The night was strangely still. It was the most peaceful Cristi Dagenais had ever seen the campus of Carleton University in the two years she has served on staff with InterVarsity Christian Fellowship. The only sounds were the prayers and worship of students, pastors, and the united staff members from three different campus ministries.
“We had the Navigators, Power to Change, and InterVarsity. We gathered at Hartwells Locks, just off Carleton property, to pray together for Carleton and all students on Ottawa campuses.”
Despite the overcast weather that threatened rain, between 40 and 50 people gathered that night, on September 1. Last year, students and staff members launched a surge of new prayer initiatives on campus. Then, inspired by the January CAPITALYZE Conference’s call for greater relational unity, Dagenais reached out to ministry leaders from a number of other campus groups. Similarly stirred toward greater unity, a staff member from Power to Change suggested the groups gather to kick off the year in prayer.
“Our hope was that it would set the tone for the year in terms of prayerful reliance and unity,” explains the staff member who Spur is calling Matthew to protect his identity, as he regularly participates in missions to closed countries.
After praying together, the assembly split into small groups, many led by students, to do prayer walks around the campus. They ended the evening outside the library with a time of worship.
“I think one important message it sends to Christian students is that we are about the Kingdom first, not our individual ministries,” Matthew says. “It can be so easy to get focused on your own ministry and not see the bigger picture of what God is doing on campus, in our city, and around the world. Events like this help remind us that our specific ministries are just a small piece of what God is doing.”
The different ministries’ staff and students say this is only the beginning. They plan to continue looking for ways to collaborate together, and with Catholic Christian Outreach, whose ministry staff were unable to attend the kick-off event.
“In a time when division, competition, and polarization are so rampant, the Kingdom of God and the Gospel of Jesus provide the shocking alternative of unity and loving one another.“
“We’ve already seen the impact [of collaboration] at the University of Ottawa,” Matthew states. “Working together has allowed us to work more in the areas each group is strongest and most gifted in.”
Dagenais stresses that when the groups come together, they do so without any competition. It’s a characteristic that Emily Lorentz of the Navigators also believes can send a strong message in today’s world.
“In a time when division, competition, and polarization are so rampant, the Kingdom of God and the Gospel of Jesus provide the shocking alternative of unity and loving one another,“ Lorentz states. “My hope for the coming year is that our various groups can pray and cheer one another on.
“As we walk and pray toward unity I can imagine students encountering a fuller expression of God during their university years and taking that reality with them in the various churches and cities they will find themselves in post-graduation.”
Similar Articles
Christmas amid COVID
When a local teacher recently asked a little boy what he enjoyed about last Christmas, he told her about going to church on Christmas Eve to worship Jesus and walking home, hand in hand, with his family. It was a good night, he said, because he felt closer to God. How will churches capture this same powerful childlike awareness of Emmanuel—God with us—amid pandemic restrictions? […]
Change of season for Spur Ottawa
Spur Ottawa is taking a hiatus from publishing. We hope during this pause to find a new editor and writers who can resume the great work of this weekly digital magazine. Please allow me, on behalf of all our readers, to give an enormous thank you to Craig Macartney for his work on this effort. Spur Ottawa published its first online article on September 23, 2015 (over 7-and-a-half years ago). Since then, Craig and […]
A New Year’s party like no other
Six ministries have united to celebrate New Year’s Eve in prayer, worship, and fellowship. While the group hosted the Cross Over Prayer Vigil several times before COVID, they say they are gaining momentum.
“The tradition of […]
A vision of 1 million souls
They come from all backgrounds: Mennonite Brethren to Charismatic to Missionary Alliance. Some were born to Canadian families while others are first- and second-generation immigrants, yet this group has far more in common than not. The group meets […]
I was a stranger and you invited me in
When refugees come to Canada, they typically bring almost nothing with them. Various government and private sponsorship programs help provide housing and food security for the first year, but the process of integrating into society is challenging. Often refugees face dire poverty. That’s where […]
The Urban Monastery brings reflective rhythms to a digital world
“Urban” and “monastery” are words few would consider compatible. The quiet, reflective rhythms of monastic life is a stark contrast to the noise and energy of an ever-moving city. Yet uniting these two ideas is exactly the solution Doug Ward proposed to address the growing problem of social disconnect […]