On Fieldwork in Ministry: Tools for Understanding our Contexts
Wineskins Contributor・10/08/19
Principal Cook, of the West Side High School in Newark, NewJersey, had a problem. Some studentsresisted when security officers tried to check their bags. While one might assume they resisted becausethey were carrying drugs or a weapon, when Principal Cook started askingquestions, he found that some students couldn’t afford to wash their clothesand were carrying dirty laundry in their backpacks. They didn’t want people going through theirbags because they were ashamed – in fact, the smell of dirty clothes wasconnected with bullying which was, in turn, connected with chronicabsences. Aware of the problem, theschool addressed it by making washers and dryers available so that dirty laundrywouldn’t get in the way of an education.
Christian Scharen’s book, Fieldwork in Theology: Exploring the Social Context of God's Work in the World (2015), examines the relationship between theology and social situation – the connection between the story of the church (ecclesiology) and culture (ethnography). Scharen summarizes the significance of the task this way: “In order to engage ministry with vitality, perceive the new things God is doing, and ‘participate in God,’ leaders have to get out and learn what’s going on and how to relate to the people and context where they are. Fieldwork in theology is that simple—and that complicated!” (30). By asking questions and not assuming we know the answers, we may be able to get to the root of what needs to change in our ministry contexts.
Living in Mozambique, Africa, from 2003 to 2018, it wasimpossible for me to assume that I really understood the culture, the contextof my ministry. This appropriate senseof desperation led me to ask questions to learn their systems and how lifeworked in “their world.” I usedqualitative interviews to investigate different parts of their culture in orderto learn how the gospel can bring good news into that reality. Over time, that desperation turned intofascination as I began to see not only the problems, but also the solutions orconnections that could be made. Inmoving back to the United States, I’ve needed help again, and I am now leaningon the university students I work with to help me understand this new (to me)“foreign” culture.
While Fieldwork in Ministry might be formally described as“qualitative interviews and triangulation of the data in small groups,” in ourministry contexts it may look more informal, although still very intentional. It doesn’t mean trying to be amateur orarmchair ethnographers, but it may look like keeping a notebook with somequestions in it and paying attention to the answers we get over a meal or aphone call. It may mean being purposefulin having conversations salted with phrases like, “I’ve noticed ____ happening…why is that?” and “Tell me more about that…;” “How’s that working for them?...for you?” “I’m curious to hear what you would say keeps _____ fromhappening?” A Fieldwork approach can bethe right tool in our ministry toolkit when we need to: Revisit a problem;Revamp a program; Augment our preaching/teaching; or Engage a challenge. Fieldwork may take various forms, but it iseffective only when we truly have eyes to see and ears to hear.
Scharen tells a story of one interviewee, a woman who had abeautiful response to being really listened to, “You heard me. You heard me allthe way... I have a strange feeling you heard me before I started. You heard meto my own story. You heard me to my own speech.” (29) Powerful things, Kingdom of God-type things,happen when people are truly heard – things like clean clothes and anenvironment where learning and transformation can happen.
For more on Principal Cook’s story, see these links:
NJ.com - Newark vice principal goes 'old school' to keep kids out of trouble