The Vision and Realities of
Reconciliation, Part Three
Lecture Notes From Perkins, chapter
14 and Update
Rev. Ron Robinson
This is a key chapter with issues
deep into ministry, and life itself, through the struggle along the spectrum of
“Doing and Being.” As Plato said: To Do Is To Be. As Aristotle said: To Be Is
To Do. As Sinatra said: Do Be Do Be Do…
As Perkins says, the focus should be
on our complete holistic Being, for that is only achieved when it contains
Doing, the living out of our Being, our Being in God. This is contextual, as he
says, but in our Western cultural worldview, and Western religions worldview,
and particularly American and Protestant Work Ethic worldview, we tend to find
it more convenient to focus on programs than people, on a to-do list than a
to-be list. This also tends to accentuate the individualist nature of our
cultural and religious worldview, instead of the being approach which leads to
a focus on the Body of Christ.
I like to use the mirror words of
imitation and initiation. How are we Being? Is a question that reminds us that
we are to be imitators of Christ, and to live as if the Kingdom of God were
here; and in this way we help to initiate it; of course, sometimes we simply
have to start helping to initiate it, to act our way into new thinking and
being, just start doing, or jump-start our doing with others, and let that lead
us into the Deeper Being from which more doing will come.
He says we must be the Body before we
can do the work of the Body, but that it is not simply enough to be a community
that does nothing but see itself as a reconciled community; that is a departure
point not a destination point. This is all a part of how Perkins keeps coming
back to a sense of holistic ministry. Social action in the neighborhood is
necessary but not enough; being in a racially reconciled congregation with
people of different races, or working regularly with those of other races, is
necessary but is not enough. He sees evangelistic action as necessary to bring “unbelievers”
to Christ, but it is not enough without social justice. I see it as one of the
differences that Alan Hirsch and Michael Frost talk about between “community”
and “communitas.” Community is inward looking and dwelling whereas communitas
is a relational community that is externally looking and dwelling.
We each need to know, as he discerned
about himself, toward which end of the spectrum of doing or being do we tend to
emphasize and which do we neglect; in what ways do we lose our balance between
doing and being?
Being in community, which is the
deepest sense of Being, is difficult, he says, because it means inherently to
be in tension with others, to struggle, to engage with conflict. (One of the
reasons why it is difficult to grow in community among and with the most
vulnerable is that the very community which would be most liberating and saving
for them means also an increase in struggle and emotional pain and conflict,
and being vulnerable they are already experiencing much of that from simple
life itself; becoming a part of a community is harder for some people than
others. This is where his admonition that we need to discern our gifts and
diverse strengths and let them lead us in and through community is helpful.
Particularly, but not limited to,
racial reconciliation work, he lifts up the importance of self-differentiation.
He says persons of one ethnic group, of those in dominant cultures for example,
can not hold themselves and their gifts back as a way of trying to further the
lives of others and the reconciliation effort, because reconciliation needs the
fullness of all who engage with it. Neither can they hold onto their natural
inclination to set the cultural norms and to always be the leaders in the
group, but must be willing and eager to submit their leadership to others who
have been in abandoned areas longer, or who have suffered from the unjust
systems and have grown into leadership through their own hard experiences in
the local area. To be self-differentiated emotionally means to be able to hold
the pain and vulnerability of one’s self and others without giving in to it; it
means being able to risk the hard conversations about race and culture and
class and privilege without the fear that making mistakes in that conversation,
or the fear of change, will keep us silent and a part from one another.
I have refined and reframed the steps
of covenant and community that were modified from the work of Tich Nhat Hanh
particularly. Our task in community is
1. Show up. This act of simple doing, simple presence. 2. Look Up. Pay attention,
be empathetic, hear others into speech. 3. Speak up. The truth in love. 4. Act
up. Commit to working together with others. 5. Show up. When all else fails in
steps one through four, have the trust to start it all again and not let the
disappointment and disillusionment stop us.
How in community are we committed to
one another through being committed together to the mission of the community? This
is true for a small community oir congregation; it is also true he says for
working in the broader perspective where it is congregations or people groups
working together, especially if it is between a community that has relocated to
a poor area and a church or group that has been there before and remained. This
brings us back to his primary focus of the 3Rs on the need for ways to Relocate
in order to facilitate the deepest kind of reconciliation, to meet God most
fully in transformative work. (And yet, still he makes room for people to be
engaged in reconciliation work even if they can not relocate with all of their
life; for example, how a white woman enrolled in a black college, or even
arranging for opportunities for people of different ethnicities to socialize
together (preferably I would add in not just one setting which might be the
safest for the host).
In the update in the revised edition
of the book, Perkins even updates the reconciliation aims beyond race which has
been his life’s story and work. In the years after Sept. 11, 2001, he says now
there is need to work on reconciliation with Muslims more, and people of
diverse cultures and beliefs. I would add in reconciliation with people of
different sexual orientations as well. He ends the Update as he begins chapter
14: reminding us of the mission of loving God AND loving our neighbors; loving
our neighbors AS loving God. This stance of reconciliation grows out of
Relocation because relocation reminds us that when Jesus talks about our
neighbors, as in the parable of the Samaritan on the road between Jerusalem and
Jericho, that our neighbors are those we fear, those we despise, those who are
different from us, those we want to stay away from, etc.
Discussion Question:
Can you illustrate from your own
life, the problem of trying to be without doing at the personal level? What
about the problem of putting being ahead of doing? Which of these two
tendencies do you have to guard against more? Which does your church, and why?
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