Monday, December 29, 2025

Mission Yearbook: Young Adult Track inspires new leaders at Triennium

“Suddenly I found that I had a dream job that I never knew I dreamed of,” Bobby Watson told a group of nearly 50 young adults participating in the learning path of the Young Adult Track at the “As If We Were Dreaming”-themed Presbyterian Youth Triennium. For many delegates ages 19–25, the opportunity to attend a Triennium was a dream come true — especially after missing their chance before turning 18 due to the Covid pandemic.

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85 Young adults at 2025 Presbyterian Youth Triennium
Young adults attended 2025’s Triennium event in Louisville. (Photo by Rich Copley)

Watson was one of several speakers chosen to address this year’s group. Others included Dr. Tamice Spencer-Helms, author of “Faith Unleavened: The Wilderness Between Trayvon Martin & George Floyd,” and the Rev. Dr. Jerry Cannon, with a guest phone call from his nephew, celebrity Nick Cannon.

This was the first Triennium to offer a dedicated Young Adult Track, featuring two distinct paths: service and learning. The Rev. Jeremy Wilhelmi, who oversaw the learning path with the Rev. Maggie Alsup, said the goal was to feature speakers — especially those close in age to the young adults — who could share personal stories and model authentic leadership.

Bringing young adults to Triennium had long been discussed, but the idea gained urgency when 2022’s event was canceled due to Covid.

“I have been looking forward to going to Triennium for forever,” said one young adult from the Heartland Presbytery delegation. “But my year was the year canceled by Covid, so I was really disappointed. But when I heard about the fact that I could come here and do an opportunity for the young adults, I was over the moon.” 

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Rev. Jeremy Wilheimi in blue shirt addresses young adults at 2025 Triennium event
The Rev. Jeremy Wilheimi curated the learning path on the Young Adult Track for the 2025 Triennium event. (Photo by Rich Copley)

Abby, 21, from Mid-Kentucky Presbytery, said, “In the young adult track, we learned about what good leadership qualities are and what are some of the issues in the world that we might, as young adults, need to take on and make changes in the church to help it be more inclusive and more empathetic towards everyone.”

For Esinam, a college student studying nursing and a member of the Ghanaian Community Presbyterian Church, a new worshiping community in Irving, Texas, Triennium offered a chance to build leadership skills. Recently ordained as a ruling elder during her church’s chartering process to become Covenant Community Church in Grace Presbytery, she hoped to better engage youth in her congregation. “It was really inspiring. I was low-key overwhelmed at my first training because I was learning so much,” she said. However, she found comfort knowing that several elders were ordained at the same time.

A recent Forbes article noted that Gen Z is reshaping the workforce, especially around purpose-driven work, authentic leadership and flexibility. Their experiences — as digital natives and with the Covid pandemic occurring during pivotal moments of their educational and career development — create a unique relationship toward efficient use of new technologies like artificial intelligence.

Themes of purpose, authenticity and flexibility were reflected in Watson’s session. Watson — now a policy advocate at Texas Impact and co-starter of Vidas Robadas — shared his journey through high school, college, and young adulthood and how those experiences shaped his interfaith policy work and the concept of faithful leadership. He named familiar Generation Z challenges: crises like the pandemic, wars abroad and school shootings.

For Watson, leadership means putting faith into action, being open to unexpected opportunities, relying on your support network, adapting to challenges and failures, creating positive change in your community, listening to and understanding diverse perspectives, taking initiative to address social issues and staying flexible and resilient.

“Everything that led me to Texas Impact was a series of failures, a series of surprises that I didn’t think would be important, and a series of people who got me to the next place,” Watson said as he introduced the concept of a “better North star.”

“I believe there are things you can want to be a part of that is a better guiding point to take you on a complicated, mixed and zigzagging path than if there were that one thing, that perfect plan,” he said. “I don’t think dream jobs are real, but I do believe in dream goals.”

At Triennium, young adults discovered how living out one’s faith can be just as creative, unexpected and winding as a dream.

Beth Waltemath, Communications Strategist (Click here to read original PNS Story)

Let us join in prayer for:

Rebecca Rayner, Paralegal, Legal & Risk Management, Administrative Services Group
Shelby ReedusNCTC Administrative Officer, Trust Services, The Presbyterian Foundation

Let us pray:

Father, we thank you for your ability to forgive us for being such an inconstant people. Help us to honor your son, Jesus, the way he deserves, each and every day. Amen.

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