From time to time, my book reviews appear in the clergy journal of "Sharing the Practice", a quarterly published by the Academy of Parish Clergy (www.apclergy.org). I select books to review after reading through the "front list" of many religious publishers. In turn, my reviews are somewhat narrative, thinking with the authors about how this book shapes my ministry as well as those of my colleagues. Here's a review just submitted for the APC "Sharing the Practice" journal:
Hoeft, Jeanne, L. Shannon Jung and Joretta Marshall. Practicing
Care in Rural Congregations and Communities.
Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 2013. ISBN # 9780800699543. $19.00.
A reviewer’s confessional: I grew up on a rural southeast Kansas farm. We felt lucky to break even some years. I know firsthand the context of rural poverty,
with a lack of sustainable, livable wage jobs “in town”. Our little community had the undercurrent of
domestic violence, the surge of rural depopulation and the persistent worry
about the dearth of “local” healthcare providers. My formative years of the 1980s and 1990s
were not easy, living in the micro what was happening in the macro, as the wave
of negative changes overcame many American farm families. Small towns and rural counties point to such
times as when those “beginning of the end” feelings started to feel palpable as
they struggled to reinvent their economic identities.
With my young adult years spent away in college and
seminary, it could be argued that I left home in order to have a
livelihood. I counter that my upbringing
prepared me to be a better pastor to those God has called me to serve in rural
Kansas, rural Vermont (where great wealth and deep poverty could be found along
the same mountain road) and now with the regional ministry of the American Baptist
Churches of New York State. Around
“upstate New York”, you encounter great diversity as well as some of our
country’s places of deep economic challenge. The states I have lived in may be
widely varied politically (in the “red/blue” sense), yet the rural challenges
have remained much too familiar wherever I lived and ministered. Nonetheless, with a down economy and
globalization, many in rural America are struggling, though perhaps in ways still
obscure to the understanding of the urbanized American populace.
I share this biographical note so that my praise for Practicing Care in Rural Congregations and
Communities can be heard moreover.
The authors serve in the fields of pastoral theology, pastoral care and rural
or “Town and Country” ministries, teaching seminarians the skills and
sensitivities necessary for ministering in places with less profile than our
secret dreams of placement in the “right church with the right everything”
allow us to imagine. The picture this
book paints of rural ministry is not one of easy reward or Keillor’s Wobegon. Instead, the authors engage the reader in the
world(s) of rural congregations and communities, providing a framework for
pastoral reflectivity and sensitivity.
Each chapter begins with an engaging case study, which allows the reader
a first glimpse into the studied response needed to engage the complexities
often overlooked in rural communities by persons who imagine “things out here
are simpler”. One needs theology,
pastoral care and no small measure of “horse sense” (as we say back home) to
minister in situations where problems are deep and comprehensive support
services are miles, and sometimes entire counties away.
The book would be quite helpful for clergy learning to
“translate” ministry skills and life experience for a rural ministry
setting. Learning to live within the
tight-knit community of a small town or with the speed at which gossip travels
can be exasperating when more accustomed to the relative anonymity of a more
densely populated area. When in less
populated communities or remote places, you enter into a much different world
that is not represented as such in popular culture or economic realities rarely
privileged among the socio-economic affluent shaping State and federal laws and
policy. For example, the tussle over the
SNAP program benefits delayed the Farm Bill’s passage in 2011, 2012 and
2013. Farm families were placed in peril
twice over: facing cuts to agricultural support
programs and in turn access to SNAP helping put food on the table in some
arguably bad years for crop yields.
Entering into the “world(s)” of rural America, the
authors have found four concepts helpful to understanding rural ministry: care shaped by place, engaging the community,
intersecting with leadership (and the styles of leadership you often find) and
responding to diversity. The authors
claim the bedrock of this book is when the pastoral caregiver engages in “a
diagnosis of one’s context; [we must realize] one style does not fit all” (p.
71). Such good advice should be well heeded. We know of many circumstances of colleagues
(and perhaps even ourselves) have failed to take this word to heart.
Developing each concept in the first section of chapters,
the authors enable pastors to see more perceptively the issues unique to rural
congregations and communities. Building
upon these skills, the authors engage the reader in various common challenges
in the second section. Chapters engage
the reader in issues of “rural poverty, class and care”, “rural violence”,
“rural health” and how to keep engaged in such reflective and reflexive
learning.
For example, a pastor is told a parish couple is involved
in a domestic violence situation. In
closer-knit communities, the victim has more obstacles accessing services or
finding safe harbor when “everybody knows everybody” or friendships and
kinships interweave among first responders, local authorities and social
workers. How does the pastor keep confidences,
help advocate for the victim and move carefully through the tapestry of
relationships inevitably webbed around any tense situation? The authors help rural ministers formulate
strategies calibrated to the realities of living in close-knit communities, let
alone the family-size churches (worship attendance under 65) that are most
common in rural America. Clergy for whom
urban areas are more normative would be wise to pay close attention to the
opening chapters as the authors provide a framework for understanding pastoral
care “shaped by place”.
In reading this book, I found myself recalling my own
ministry experiences. In some cases, I
felt affirmed that I had intuited positive pastoral care strategies sensitive
to the matters at hand. In other
situations, I wish I had read this book a decade ago when just starting out in
ministry. For seminary classrooms, such
a book is needed for the 501 Pastoral Care type courses, as rural ministry is a
likely context for many “new to ministry” seminarians and lay studies-track
clergy. For pastoral collegiality groups,
the book will serve as a helpful conversation starter and enhance our abilities
to serve in the places God calls us.
Well done Jerrod.
ReplyDeleteI like the whole layout too
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