{"id":54130,"date":"2020-05-17T23:58:07","date_gmt":"2020-05-17T23:58:07","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.augsburg.edu\/ccv\/?p=54130"},"modified":"2024-11-06T16:13:44","modified_gmt":"2024-11-06T16:13:44","slug":"public-ministry-in-a-pandemic","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.augsburg.edu\/ccv\/2020\/05\/17\/public-ministry-in-a-pandemic\/","title":{"rendered":"Public Ministry in a Pandemic"},"content":{"rendered":"
by Jeremy Myers<\/a><\/p>\n By most measures, it was a typical Wednesday morning commute. Coffee in the cupholder, slow traffic, radio tuned to NPR, brain wandering and wondering if it is ready for the day. But this day was not a normal day. Local government officials were beginning to encourage us to practice social distancing, diligent hand-washing, and no face-touching. It was the third Wednesday of Lent and I was rehearsing my sermon for that evening in my head. My colleague and I had been invited to preach a 5-week Lenten sermon series on the Public Church at a local church. I was in the middle of a thought – reminding myself NOT to crack any inappropriate jokes about the pandemic during the sermon \u2013 when I noticed a crowd gathered on the overpass.<\/p>\n The Saint Paul Federation of Educators (St. Paul Public School\u2019s teachers\u2019 union) had just begun their strike and they were demonstrating on every overpass that crossed Interstate 35E and Interstate 94 in Saint Paul. I honked to show my support as I drove under the bridge. Then it hit me. These teachers are beginning their necessary strike which will require public demonstrations.<\/p>\n How will they do this while honoring the call to social distancing? We will be preaching tonight, encouraging a congregation to move into their neighborhood as a public church. How will they do this while honoring the call to social distancing? It has been two months since that not-at-all-normal morning commute, and I think I have some things to say about how we live as a Public Church in a pandemic.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n If our goal is simply catechesis \u2013 teaching people what we believe \u2013 then all we need is new delivery methods for the information we want people to have. But if our goal is the transformation of lives and the worlds we live in with our neighbors, then delivering information over the interwebs is not enough. The church has become quite skilled at delivering information and assuming it\u2019s forming faith and transforming lives. I have been so impressed with the creative ways congregations are delivering everything from worship services, to game-nights, to virtual retreats. But I also want us to find creative ways to remain public.<\/p>\n In Caminemos Con Jes\u00fas: Toward a Hispanic\/ Latino Theology of Accompaniment<\/em> Roberto Goizueta says God\u2019s preferential option for the poor \u201c. . . implies a preferential option for the home, the city, and, the crossroads where home and city meet, the church.\u201d The mainline church\u2019s current understanding of the relationship between home and congregation is one of partnership between the home and the congregation in order to enhance faith formation in both. Goizueta values both home and church, but sees their partnership as being for the sake of the city or public. The home is not where we rehearse for a Christian life lived in a congregation, nor is the congregation the place where we rehearse for a Christian life lived in our homes. Instead, the congregation becomes the place where communities of all types (i.e., friends, families, etc.) rehearse for a Christian life lived in the community, or the public square. In this sense, the family becomes the learning unit, not the individual.<\/p>\n An individual is not taught how to be a disciple by her parents; rather the whole family learns to live as faithful, freed and called disciples in their own communities. The congregation is called to help the family learn new ways to engage and respond to their neighbors in their public encounters. So, simply delivering content to homes is not enough. How can we, in this pandemic, be a crossroads where home and city meet \u2013 where our individual members and families learn to be good news for their neighbors in a pandemic? Paulo Freire says education is always for domestication or liberation. How are we \u2013 in this pandemic teaching for liberation and not domestication? Are we spending our time trying to keep our people’s\u2019 attention on our congregations or are we freeing them to be good news for their neighbors?<\/p>\n A few years ago, there was a story in the Star Tribune about a small congregation in Woodbury, MN that knew it was dying. They made the decision to go out in a blaze of glory by spending down their endowment in service of their community. They would only gather for worship \u2013 no meetings \u2013 and the rest of their time together would be spent serving their neighborhood. They visited local nursing homes, read stories at the local elementary school, and put together weekend meal kits for the students at that school and their families. They took up the hard work of engaging their neighbors. They saw their neighbors\u2019 struggles and began to give themselves away for the sake of these neighbors.<\/p>\n And. They. Grew.<\/p>\n These neighbors started attending worship. And the church did not close. The congregation chose to die gracefully so the Body of Christ could live. If we put our energy into ensuring the sustainability and longevity of our congregations at the expense of our neighbors\u2019 needs, then we run the risk of losing both our neighbors and our congregations. But if we put our energy towards ensuring the wellbeing of our neighbors and our neighborhoods, then even if we lose our congregations, we will have become the body of Christ incarnate in our neighborhoods. In the midst of this pandemic, we are all dying to live again. Maybe the best way we can be dying to live is by risking the financial future of our congregations. After all, most of our congregations are built with dollars whose origins are rooted in American slavery and most of our buildings are on land stolen from Native Americans.<\/p>\n Public ministry in a pandemic will require us to face death head-on. It is inevitable. We cannot avoid it. Our congregations might not die, but parts of our congregations will need to die so that the good news of Jesus Christ might live into our communities. I heard from many leaders who recognized their impulse to over-function immediately after we were ordered to stay at home. We cannot, and should not, do everything. But what will we let die? Our neighbors need life and hope, they do not need a lot of what we spend resources on as a church. What might God\u2019s spirit be asking us to let die so that we have resources for where life is needed? Can we eliminate some practices, some \u201csacred cows\u201d, some expenses that are not bringing life to our neighborhoods right now?<\/p>\n Hopefully you are saying, \u201cYes. We can let things die so our neighbors might have life.\u201d But you also might be wondering how you determine what can be released and how your neighbors might need you to show up. This is when I beg you to trust the artforms of the Public Church Framework.<\/p>\n In September 2011 I invited a group of ministry leaders to join Walter Brueggemann and I for breakfast at Augsburg University to begin imaging a new approach to discipleship with young people that prioritized community engagement over catechesis. To be clear, catechesis (or the teaching of core beliefs) is still critical, but I do not think it is the place to begin. Instead, I believe faith formation or discipleship or Christian education must begin by encountering life and the neighbor. From there we can move into catechesis, or the teachings of our faith, with the questions that arise from our encounter with our neighbor. I\u2019m sure I\u2019m wrong, but I like to think our conversation shaped Brueggemann\u2019s latest book, Materiality as Resistance: Five Elements for Moral Action in the Real World<\/em>. I\u2019m sure I\u2019m right when I say this conversation with these ministry leaders shaped the creation of what we now call the Public Church Framework.<\/p>\n The Public Church Framework is a process of four movements \u2013 what we call artforms \u2013 which include: (1) accompaniment, (2) interpretation, (3) discernment, and (4) proclamation. It grows out of the assumption that we must first do the hard work of hearing our neighbors\u2019 bad news if we want to know how to proclaim good news to them.\u00a0 These are the artforms we must lean on now more than ever during this pandemic. These movements will help our people move from their homes into their neighborhoods as accompaniers, interpreters, discerners, and proclaimers of good news \u2013 as faithful people who are dying to live.<\/p>\n If you are reading this as one of our Riverside Innovation Hub partner congregations, then you have already been learning how to flex these muscles. You know what it feels like to practice accompaniment, interpretation, discernment, and proclamation. If you are not one of our partner congregations, it is my hunch that you also already know how to do this work. We like to say the Public Church Framework is descriptive not prescriptive. I like to say it\u2019s not rocket surgery. It is not prescribing a fool-proof technology for solving the church\u2019s challenges. It is simply describing what we already do when we are attempting to proclaim Christ\u2019s good news into our world. You are certainly already doing all of these artforms, but you might not be doing them intentionally. Or you might not be doing them intentionally in relation to one another. Or you might not be involving your entire congregation in the work of these artforms. They are not a planning method reserved for the professional church staff or council. They are meant to be practices or habits that shape the congregation\u2019s culture and life together. Are you simply delivering content to your congregation right now, or are you equipping them to transform lives where they live?<\/p>\n The muscles we have been building are the muscles we need now more than ever \u2013 listening, thinking theologically, discerning, and proclaiming. Double-down on these movements right now. Use them with your leadership teams, teach your congregation how to practice them in their homes and in their neighborhoods. They need you to proclaim the good news to them but they also need you to help them learn to discern how they are being called to participate in the good news with others right now.<\/p>\n I can\u2019t tell you how you should do this in your context. That depends on your gifts as a leader, your congregation\u2019s assets, and the realities of your congregation\u2019s neighborhood. But I can ask you some questions to get you thinking and wondering about the work to be done.<\/p>\n
<\/h2>\nfrom Church to Home to Neighborhoods<\/h2>\n
<\/h2>\nDie to Live<\/h2>\n
Trust the Artforms<\/h2>\n
<\/a><\/p>\nSome Questions to get you Started<\/h2>\n
<\/h3>\nAccompaniment
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Interpretation<\/h3>\n
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Discernment<\/h3>\n
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Proclamation<\/h3>\n
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Habits for Life<\/h2>\n