The more I thought about the conversations surrounding last weeks post
on re-thinking mission in youth ministry, the more I thought about the
need for youth workers to also be re-thinking the idea of narrative in
youth ministry.
I am hearing a wonderful amount of chatter around 'story' and the art
of storytelling in youth ministry. What I am thinking more about these
days, however, isn't our ability to craft good stories and tell them
well. What I have been absorbed by lately is what is commonly referred
to by some as narrative intelligence, which is the ability and capacity
to think in story.
Thinking in story is critical for a meaningful connection between a
person's story, the story of a particular community and God's story. So
the question lingering in my mind and heart is, how do we help our
students raise their narrative intelligence? In other words, how do we
help the students in our faith communities engage more deeply in the
enduring, unfolding narrative of God?
Tantamount
to the mission of God we thought about last week is the narrative of
God for it is out of God's narrative that mission is first and most
deeply understood and acted out. It is out of mission that we might
interact with our worlds -- not just with logic, reason and information
but also with meaning. The ability to think in story furnishes our
students' lives with the ability to generate context and meaning from
the stories of Scripture, their experience, reason, culture, etc. How
do we help our students generate context and meaning from the mission
of God to help them live more closely aligned to the intended ways of
God?
Last week when I mentioned that youth ministry might be "on
hold" what I was referring to was that our commitment to think
theologically, organize philosophically and act practically about
mission was in need of renovation. The more I think about it, the only
way we can truly renovate our commitment to being missional in and to
our communities is to go back to the source, God's narrative, to find
our purpose for youth ministry. That purpose (derived from our
mission which is derived from God's narrative) of youth ministry is to
participate in God's restoration of the world toward its intended
wholeness.
Youth ministry has to get unstuck and work its way toward extending the missio Dei through a creed of:
evangelism (where the message of the mission is proclaimed and performed),
contextualization (where the message of the mission is made more accessible culturally sensitive)
liberation
(where the message of the mission sets students free from the
hesitations and hindrances that keep them from their belief in a loving
God) and
impartation (where the message of the mission is about the converting of culture from hearers of the story to storytellers).
Ultimately, this helps students think in story, raising their narrative intelligence.
I'm
certain that youth ministry (through mission yielded people like you
and me and a globe full of others) can make its way toward a place as
described above, but how? In what ways might we more deeply commit
to a narrative-missional approach to youth ministry? What is it going
to take to realize this commitment? What is keeping youth ministry
from this commitment? Why is it so much easier to be committed to
attractional, social or externally focused approaches?
I'd love to know what you think.
By Chris Folmsbee
originally appeared at http://blog.beliefnet.com/jesuscreed/
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