Seeing-Remembering-Connecting: Subversive Practices of Being Church
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About this ebook
This new framework, seeing-remembering-connecting, evokes ordinary practices that can engage those from diverse faith traditions and from no faith tradition, and points to the heart of what churches have long been about: God is becoming manifest in and through what these verbs imply--as transcendently immanent. Seeing-remembering-connecting is nurtured over the long term in faith communities, as they put together what is fragmentary or forgotten, point to what is true, and empower communities to see, remember, and act in organized actions with others--across boundaries of religion, geography, and self-interest.
Rev. Dr. Karen L. Bloomquist
Karen L. Bloomquist has served as a parish pastor in California, New York City, and Washington State, and as a seminary professor in Chicago, Dubuque, and Philadelphia. She has directed theological work of the ELCA (Chicago) and Lutheran World Federation (Geneva). Most recently, she served as Dean at Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary in Berkeley. She has edited many books and written many articles. One of her books is The Dream Betrayed (1990).
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Seeing-Remembering-Connecting - Rev. Dr. Karen L. Bloomquist
Seeing-Remembering-Connecting
Subversive Practices of Being Church
Karen L. Bloomquist
7424.pngSeeing-remembering-connecting
Subversive Practices of Being Church
Copyright © 2016 Karen L. Bloomquist. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical publications or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Write: Permissions, Wipf and Stock Publishers, 199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3, Eugene, OR 97401.
Cascade Books
An Imprint of Wipf and Stock Publishers
199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3
Eugene, OR 97401
www.wipfandstock.com
ISBN 13: 978-1-4982-8197-3
EISBN 13: 978-1-4982-8198-0
Cataloging-in-Publication data:
Bloomquist, Karen L.
Seeing-remembering-connecting : subversive practices of being church / Karen L. Bloomquist.
xiv + 108 p.; 23 cm—Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN 13: 978-1-4982-8197-3
1. Theology. 2. Church. 3. Christianity and politics. I. Title.
BX1746 B345 2016
Manufactured in the USA
All biblical quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version, Copyright © 1989, Division of Christian Education of the National Council of Churches of Christ in the U.S.A. Used by permission; all rights reserved.
Table of Contents
Title Page
An Autobiographical Preface
Chapter 1: Church in Society
Today?
Chapter 2: A Subversive Church of the Cross
Chapter 3: How Luther Challenged Dominating Power in His Day
Chapter 4: Theologically Engaging Domination Today
Chapter 5: Why Seeing–Remembering–Connecting?
Chapter 6: Subversive Seeing
Chapter 7: Subversive Remembering
Chapter 8: Subversive Connecting
Chapter 9: Ecclesia for the Sake of the World
Bibliography
An Autobiographical Preface
This book is rooted in and reflects what I have experienced and learned over the past half century. I continually have found myself in the swirling sometimes chaotic whirlwind of pivotal societal and ecclesial changes occurring during this time. I grew up in a church that was a stable, anchoring institution in both community and family. It embodied the importance of being a good citizen, upholding traditional values and a sense of social order, but with little conscious connection to emerging social challenges. In contrast to this in the late 1960s, I began to be exposed to the civil rights and peace movements, and the emerging woman’s movement. Thus began a lifelong sojourn of what I have now come to frame as seeing-remembering-connecting.
I intentionally sought out and began to see and experience what I had not before: blatant realities of exclusion, injustice and oppression. This was stirred up in high school through a critical social science teacher, as well as through daring leaders of the national (ALC) Luther League who drew us into stark realities and radical ways of thinking we would not have encountered otherwise. This was the beginning of seeing
in new ways, apart from the conventional ways that still prevailed in a conservative Midwestern community. This continued during college, when as a result of an urban plunge
summer experience in Chicago, I naively tried to open the eyes of those in my white home town to the realities of racism and the emerging Black Power movement.
Feeling drawn to participate in the first Global Semester of St. Olaf College, my eyes were opened as together we encountered the strange cultures and glaring injustices permeating the countries where we studied (Ethiopia, India, Thailand, and Japan). It was 1968–69, while the Vietnam War was raging, but we were being exposed to a much different side of these cultures and much different ideologies than those prevailing in the U.S. military. We were zealous to communicate what we had seen when we returned to communities that were still rather homogenous, but have become much more diverse since then.
Even at this stage, I was being drawn into a kind of remembering that was the inception of what would become a re-membering.
Lifted up and remembered were the prophetic traditions and social change trajectories in the Bible that often were overlooked, and which provide much of the impetus for social critique. Only much later, in graduate theological work, would I take up the challenge of re-membering,
that is, putting together or transfiguring theological traditions/themes in new ways. I began remembering what or who has been forgotten or overlooked in our own families, communities and churches, not to mention the rest of the world. I could not forget what I had seen throughout the world.
At the same time, increasingly I was caught up in the stirrings of the woman’s movement, especially as it related to the church, which then was still a bastion of white male power and privilege. Although I had not previously thought of going to seminary, and received little encouragement from my all-male religion professors to do so, increasingly I felt drawn (now I realize called
) to do so, especially to a setting (Berkeley) where there was the possibility of connecting with a number of women ecumenically (but in 1970 not at Lutheran seminaries). I soon became coordinator of the fledgling women’s center that was forming at the Graduate Theological Union. Although our critiquing of male-oriented language and theological constructs, advocating for the first women faculty to be hired, and early attempts to do
feminist theology, may have appeared somewhat strident and/or naive to some, this did break through ground. Amazingly, in many places now over a majority or those studying at and teaching at theological seminaries are female, in dramatic contrast to 1970 when there was one or none.
During this time, I also became more aware of gay/lesbian stories and struggles, which still were being kept mostly silent, except in safe
places like San Francisco, where since the 1960s church leaders had taken a lead in exposing this as a justice matter. While I was in seminary, the first openly gay pastor was ordained (1972 in the United Church of Christ). However, this did not become a more public struggle in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) until 1988, when three gay men at the seminary from which I earlier had graduated became open. From then, it took until 2009 before ELCA policies changed.
I became increasingly focused on how church and society relate to each other, and critical of how that had been occurring in the aftermath of the 1950s. In retrospect it was not by coincidence that I majored in both religion and sociology in college, then chose to attend a seminary in Berkeley, and later pursued a doctorate at Union Theological Seminary in NYC, both in places at the cauldron of significant social changes that would soon be sweeping across and transforming the whole country and globe, and with teachers at the latter who were at the critical forefront of this, such as Dorothee Soelle, James Cone, Cornel West, Tom Driver, and Beverly Harrison.
Connecting
can describe what I did in my doctoral dissertation, where I made critical links between the liberation and political theologies I had been drawn to, with the working class realities in my upbringing and first congregation. I had sometimes looked down upon the latter in my drive to become upwardly mobile, but this changed when I connected these realities with transformative insights from Lutheran theology viewed through liberation/political theologies.¹ Through this seeing and remembering, I began to make connections I had not before. I connected the faith traditions that had formed me with the pursuit of social justice and liberation, and connected with other groups pursuing this. I also began making connections—identifying the gaps or contradictions—between what was proclaimed and the actual realities of injustice, between the official American creed and the realities of what actually was occurring in the wider society.
Significantly, what I saw and experienced in serving as the pastor of local congregations (in California, New York City, and Washington State) has been the point of reference and accountability for much of my theological work. Furthermore, the theological/pastoral method I developed was one where what ordinary folks actually were experiencing was connected critically with the official reigning scripts they had been conditioned to buy into, thus evoking what needed to be addressed theologically.
In the 1980s I moved with my husband Bill to Chicago where our son Aaron was born, and where I served on the faculty at the Lutheran School of Theology. Just as I was about to be tenured, I left that position because I felt called to direct the department through which various critical social issues would be addressed in the early years of Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), and the opportunity to shape new more participatory ways for doing so. From the beginning of the ELCA in 1988, we envisioned the church becoming a community of moral deliberation. We set forth the grounds and necessity for such, realizing that church as well as society can become so polarized around social issues such as abortion (see chapter 8 here).
In developing guiding principles in a social statement on economic life,² those on the task force ranged from a venture capitalist to those entrapped in and addressing systemic poverty. Listening posts took us to persons involved in the federal government and on Wall Street, as well as those unemployed. The faith-grounded social statement with its rather progressive policy recommendations was adopted by an ELCA church-wide assembly (1999) with hardly any changes, and has provided bases for many public advocacy stances ever since. A number of other social statements on other critical topics have been developed and adopted since then, providing a basis for the ELCA to become a more public church.
These challenges were far greater in my subsequent call to direct the Department for Theology and Studies of the Lutheran World Federation (1999–2010), pursuing much of this work with ecumenical and interfaith partners. My intent was to encourage those in what has become the majority global South to examine critically the theology and practices they had inherited from missionaries, as well as the importance of those from much different contexts being able to listen, learn and be transformed through their interaction with one another. This climaxed in 2009 in what then was the largest gathering of Lutheran theologians, half of whom were from the global South. Along with a host of others, seeds were being planted in soil (the culture
of church and society) that at that stage was still tightly packed, resistant to change, and not very inviting. Gradually as the ground would be loosened through God’s Spirit, this soil would become more fertile, enabling the seeds to germinate and grow into mature plants.
Today woman are extensively and prominently present as spokespersons throughout American society. Yet women and other minorities end up in corporate leadership positions mainly in times of downturn or turmoil, which also applies to churches and seminaries. Advocacy still is needed especially by and for those