onespirit supervisor
Jackie Wilkinson
We all minister to each other in our daily lives,
but stepping forward explicitly to serve is for me
another great adventure on the
lifelong journey of unfolding wisdom.
What year were you ordained? 2004
What inspired you to pursue training with OneSpirit? I read the code of ethics and wanted to be part of an organisation that lived by that ethos.
What services do you provide? It is my great honour and privilege to create and officiate at tailor made weddings, funerals, blessings and other life passage ceremonies. Furthermore, I hold inspirational workshops, coaching sessions, spiritual counselling and supervision sessions for people of all faiths and non. The aim is to connect people to the power within themselves, or to whatever speaks to their heart, and to the unity of all things.
What motivated you to expand your ministry by becoming a Supervisor? I feel in love with the experience of supervision, how it supported and championed me in my training and in my work. after tutoring for a number of years it seem the most natural progression of my work and service to others
How can clients get in touch with you? By email or through my ROSIM profile.
Get to Know Me
What do you consider the most rewarding aspect of being an ordained interfaith minister? We all minister to each other in our daily lives, but stepping forward explicitly to serve is for me another great adventure on the lifelong journey of unfolding wisdom. The most rewarding aspect of being an Interfaith minister is that it allows me to serve while honouring the diverse aspects of spirituality and valveing each contribution for the light it sheds on the awareness of the whole.
What do you consider the most rewarding aspect of being an accredited supervisor? Seeing others flourish and grow into a deeper truth of themselves.
How do you put your personal ministry into practice? I try to walk my talk and live my truth in all that I do. Spirituality for me is a calling to go beyond any sense of separation, to experience the wisdom found within each of us and meet our wholeness or unity. As the mystics of all the generations have told us this is the truth found at the heart of all the major religions.
Why do you believe supervision plays an essential role in developing and deepening a minister’s practices? We all need to be seen, heard, supported and challenged if we are to live our truest self. Supervision is the outward manifestation of that process as it enables us to see others as whole and as one and part of ourselves.