{"id":1863,"date":"2023-12-20T15:01:46","date_gmt":"2023-12-20T15:01:46","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.augsburg.edu\/riversidehub\/?p=1863"},"modified":"2025-05-29T15:03:36","modified_gmt":"2025-05-29T15:03:36","slug":"neighbor-beloved-child-of-god-you-matter","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.augsburg.edu\/riversidehub\/2023\/12\/20\/neighbor-beloved-child-of-god-you-matter\/","title":{"rendered":"Neighbor, Beloved Child of God, You Matter"},"content":{"rendered":"
Written by Kristina Frug\u00e9\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n As we wrap up the calendar year of 2023, our RIH learning community is concluding its first season of work – the season of orientation. These first few months of gathering, learning and connecting have been saturated with lots of new ideas, invitations and challenges. I may have heard one or two folks describe this season feeling as though we\u2019ve been drinking from a fire hydrant – a fair way to describe it. However, our intention has been to zoom out in this season and look at the journey ahead from the 30,000 foot perspective. We have been aiming to offer an overview of a new map of sorts.\u00a0 We believe this map will help our learning community of folks explore God\u2019s call to them in this present moment of our changing world.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n We need new maps. And we need to cultivate different orienteering skills that help us show up in the world looking for and aligned with God\u2019s vision for flourishing and mending in our places. Our season of orientation has attempted to offer some insights on these new maps to inform the journey we intend to pursue together, each in our unique corners of this map\u2026on the ground, from within our congregations\u2019 local neighborhoods.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n In September we gathered for our <\/span>launch event<\/span><\/a> and <\/span>cohorts met<\/span><\/a> for the first time in the weeks following. These gatherings were focused on introductions – many introductions! Introductions to some of the big ideas and imaginations resourcing the work of being vital neighbors. This included learning about<\/span> the call to be public churches through both theological and practical lenses<\/i><\/b>; an <\/span>interrogation of the dominating stories<\/i><\/b> that prevent us from living into the call to be about mending and loving in our neighborhoods; and <\/span>initial reflections on why<\/i><\/b> folks in this new learning community feel compelled to be a part of becoming public churches. We also had introductions to the team of staff who will be stewarding the learning community. And introductions to one another, a growing learning community of church leaders – lay and ordained – stewarding this neighborhood work on behalf of their congregations. In December, we spent time with the team leads from all of our congregations in the hopes that connecting across this group of key leaders will help folks find support and encouragement as we journey together, with the guidance of this new map.\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\nWrapping up a season of orientation\u00a0<\/b><\/h3>\n
<\/a>For many of us in congregations, we\u2019ve been working off of older tried and true maps to help us get our bearings and shape our ministries. Those maps may have been more reliable in previous times. However, the landscape of the world we live in and its challenges has shifted significantly in recent decades. These shifts have only intensified in recent years\u2026the global health crisis of Covid 19, a racial uprising in the wake of George Floyd\u2019s murder, increased economic insecurities, a growing mental health crisis, increasing impacts of our global climate crisis, war and violence, just to name a few.\u00a0 The list of hurts, heartaches and fears in the world and in our own lives is overwhelming. The church has been deeply impacted by this increasingly unpredictable landscape. But also,\u00a0 we are a people <\/span>rooted <\/span><\/i>in a story that is <\/span>rooted<\/span><\/i> in love and whose fruits are intended to bring healing, nourishment and wholeness to God\u2019s creation. This means that while the church attends to its own struggles, it is simultaneously holding a particular call to help respond to the bad news being generated daily in our communities and around the globe.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\nHow we\u2019ve spent this season<\/b><\/h3>\n