关怀与正义前沿的声音

IF 0.7 0 RELIGION
M. Moschella, Danjuma Gibson
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These scholars charge pastoral theologians to focus more intently on educating students for the work of a diverse array of chaplaincy roles, including not only military, hospital, prison, and educational chaplaincy, but also chaplaincy that attends to the needs of political protestors, eco-chaplains, and chaplains responding to those devastated by pandemics and natural disasters. Rambo and Giles argue that chaplaincy is becoming the primary professional form of ministries of spiritual and pastoral care in our time. They assert that seminaries and divinity schools must adjust to this new reality, instead of merely tweaking traditional Masters of Divinity programs that privilege the role of Christian church pastors over other religious leaders and over other forms of ministry. To this end, Rambo and Giles offer us a series of eleven short articles written by chaplaincy practitioners and educators. These authors discuss various issues arising from their work experience. 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Phillis Sheppard, Chanequa Walker-Barnes, and many other scholars in pastoral theology have been raising important critiques of racism and white supremacy in teaching, research, and pastoral practice for justice and liberation. Still, these current articles cry out for change, reminding us that this field that resides at the intersection of theory and practice is strengthened when scholars and teachers listen to the voices of practitioners fully engaged in living ministries of care. Rambo and Giles point to three needed foci in teaching that are familiar to most who teach pastoral and spiritual care classes: skills in meaning-making, interpersonal competencies, and navigating organizations. If pastoral theologians have been teaching these skills already, what are we missing? Perhaps it is a deeper engagement with practitioners who are in the forefront of chaplaincy work, those who can tell academics how theory and practice play out where the rubber the hits the road. 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引用次数: 1

摘要

《教牧神学杂志》第32卷的第一期包括一个关于牧师的特刊,以及2021年教牧神学学会(SPT)年度研究会议的亮点,主题是“启示录世界中的病毒关怀和病毒正义”。在《牧师特刊》中,我们很高兴为大家介绍《精神关怀的变化:对牧师教育的启示》,客座编辑是波士顿大学的谢利·兰博和哈佛神学院的谢丽尔·贾尔斯。这些学者要求教牧神学家更专注于教育学生从事各种牧师角色的工作,不仅包括军队、医院、监狱和教育牧师,还包括照顾政治抗议者、生态牧师和应对受流行病和自然灾害破坏的牧师。兰博和贾尔斯认为,在我们这个时代,牧师正在成为精神和教牧关怀部门的主要专业形式。他们断言,神学院和神学院必须适应这种新的现实,而不是仅仅调整传统的神学硕士课程,使基督教教会牧师的角色凌驾于其他宗教领袖和其他形式的事工之上。为此,兰博和贾尔斯为我们提供了一系列由牧师从业者和教育工作者撰写的十一篇短文。这些作者讨论了从他们的工作经验中产生的各种问题。其中最突出的是需要更多代表不同宗教团体和种族身份的牧师。这些文章指出了当前的教育和培训模式给少数群体和少数宗教团体的牧师带来的许多障碍,并要求牧养神学家根据从业者在这种变化的专业环境中遇到的不断变化的条件和情况来反思教学方法和实践。这里提出的问题在某些方面对我们这个领域来说并不新鲜。Kathleen Greider, Tom Beaudoin和其他人已经挑战了“基督教性”在牧养和精神关怀模式中的普遍存在。Carrie Doehring长期以来一直主张向神学院和神学院的学生教授跨宗教能力。Phillis Sheppard, Chanequa Walker-Barnes和许多其他教牧神学学者在教学、研究和教牧实践中提出了对种族主义和白人至上主义的重要批评,以争取正义和解放。尽管如此,这些当前的文章呼吁改变,提醒我们,当学者和教师倾听充分参与生活护理部门的从业者的声音时,这个位于理论和实践交叉点的领域就会得到加强。兰博和贾尔斯指出,大多数教牧灵关怀课程的人都熟悉教学中需要关注的三个方面:创造意义的技能、人际交往能力和组织导航能力。如果教牧神学家已经在教授这些技能,我们还错过了什么?也许这是与牧师工作前沿的实践者的更深层次的接触,这些人可以告诉学者理论和实践如何发挥作用,橡皮击中道路。我们希望这个特别的问题有助于激发学者和牧师之间在许多特定背景下的更多对话。这些作者也提醒我们,牧师们自己也经历了各种形式的
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Voices at the Forefront of Care and Justice
The first issue in volume 32 of the Journal of Pastoral Theology includes a special issue on chaplaincy and highlights from the 2021 Society of Pastoral Theology (SPT) Annual Study Conference with the theme ‘Viral Care and Viral Justice in an Apocalyptic World.’ In the chaplaincy special issue, we are pleased to feature ‘The Changing Landscape of Spiritual Care: Implications for the Education of Chaplains,’ guest-edited by Shelly Rambo of Boston University and Cheryl Giles of Harvard Divinity School. These scholars charge pastoral theologians to focus more intently on educating students for the work of a diverse array of chaplaincy roles, including not only military, hospital, prison, and educational chaplaincy, but also chaplaincy that attends to the needs of political protestors, eco-chaplains, and chaplains responding to those devastated by pandemics and natural disasters. Rambo and Giles argue that chaplaincy is becoming the primary professional form of ministries of spiritual and pastoral care in our time. They assert that seminaries and divinity schools must adjust to this new reality, instead of merely tweaking traditional Masters of Divinity programs that privilege the role of Christian church pastors over other religious leaders and over other forms of ministry. To this end, Rambo and Giles offer us a series of eleven short articles written by chaplaincy practitioners and educators. These authors discuss various issues arising from their work experience. Prominent among these is the need for more chaplains representing diverse religious communities and racial identities. Pointing out the many obstacles that current modes of education and training present for chaplains in minority groups and minority religious groups, these essays challenge pastoral theologians to reflect on pedagogies and practices in light of the changing conditions and situations that practitioners are encountering in this altered professional landscape. The issues raised here are in some ways not new to us in the field. Kathleen Greider, Tom Beaudoin, and others have challenged the ubiquity of ‘Christianicity’ in models of pastoral and spiritual care. Carrie Doehring has long advocated for the teaching of inter-religious competencies to students in seminaries and divinity schools. Phillis Sheppard, Chanequa Walker-Barnes, and many other scholars in pastoral theology have been raising important critiques of racism and white supremacy in teaching, research, and pastoral practice for justice and liberation. Still, these current articles cry out for change, reminding us that this field that resides at the intersection of theory and practice is strengthened when scholars and teachers listen to the voices of practitioners fully engaged in living ministries of care. Rambo and Giles point to three needed foci in teaching that are familiar to most who teach pastoral and spiritual care classes: skills in meaning-making, interpersonal competencies, and navigating organizations. If pastoral theologians have been teaching these skills already, what are we missing? Perhaps it is a deeper engagement with practitioners who are in the forefront of chaplaincy work, those who can tell academics how theory and practice play out where the rubber the hits the road. We hope this special issue helps to spark increased dialogue between academics and chaplains in their many particular contexts. These authors remind us, also, of the human toll on chaplains who themselves experience intersectional forms of
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