Our faith has to be alive and light fires within our
confused and fragile hearts or it is as meaningless as
yesterdays E-mail. We are the new
church"Generation X" label or notand soon
enough we will be the ones passing on a tradition that life is
worth living, loving, and dying for. Timothy Malone,
28
Generation X. 13th Generation. Twentysomething. Slacker.
Whiner. Hopeless....Faithless?
What is radical faith for the emerging generation, and how
does it manifest itself in our personal lives, in our jobs, with
loved ones, in our churches, and in society? An ad hoc group of
Sojourners staff members in their 20s came together to explore
the spiritual-something of this new generation. We sought
responses from a diverse body of twentysomethings who could offer
a fresh outlook on theology, lifestyle, and vocation. Most
submissions came from authors who have never written for us.
Seeking out new voices sometimes required finding
unconventional conversation spots. In addition to faxes, letters,
and phone calls, we discovered a niche on "Ecunet," a
religious corner of the internet, where posting our invitation
generated more than 200 responses. This on-line discussion gave
excellent context to the forum we finally put together.
We often disagreed about what to include in the forum. Various
experiences spoke more clearly to some of us than to others. But
the joy of this format, we decided, was that there was space for
difference. Faith manifests itself in our personal lives, in our
jobs, and with our loved ones in ways as different as our genetic
makeups and personality quirks.
We proceeded with caution about stereotyping, but recognized
common events that shaped our perspectives. As children of the
70s and 80s, we are shaped by AIDS, increasing
openness to gays and lesbians, the end of the Cold War,
Reaganomics and cash machines, the Challenger disaster, the Crips
and the Bloods, Earth Day and recycling bins, the Gulf war, and
"We Are the World." These mold and shape us in ways
comparable to how our parents and grandparents were molded by
polio, McCarthyism, the world wars, the Depression, the Kennedy
and King assassinations, the Civil Rights movement, the Cuban
Missile Crisis, Vietnam, and "We Shall Overcome."
WHERE ADVANCES in technology once brought television and the
beginning of the computer age, we now have MTV, CNN, and the
Information Superhighway. Instead of Ozzie and Harriet or Ward
and June, we were raised on single-mom Mrs. Partridge and the
combined Brady family, reflecting the reality of divorce and the
evolving acceptance of the many forms families can take.
Combining our own experiences with the pool of essays we
received, weve sensed that the Gen-X religious experience
is often a proactive search coupled with a pragmatism about
radical faith. Vocationally, faith is lived out in a wide array
of institutions, from the corporate world to the government and
non-profit sectors, and not always standing with a picket sign at
a protest.
On a personal level, radical faith can entail throwing trash
in the right container, volunteering in a soup kitchen or a
womens shelter, or mentoring youthall while owning
the contradictions of our sinful complicity. A religious
experience may manifest itself in a book, in a kitchen cutting
garden vegetables, in a forest, or with a friend. It may occur
with a kindred stranger, in a dream, in a song, or at a
concertand sometimes in a church.
Many of us often do feel dissonance and tension between
generations. We hear the speeches, sign the petitions, read the
materials, and work into the progressive Christian and secular
institutions of the day. Questions ariseHow do we fit in?
Do we incorporate, fusing our energy and vision? Are we allowed?
Are we trusted? Or should we do what our good founders did
when they were in their 20s and start our own organizations? Can
we afford to sacrifice wisdom, years of experience, and mentoring
relationships for the opportunity to "do it our way"?
We want to learn but intend to be heard. Though we are
confident of what we have to contribute, leadership is not
disdained. The leadership we desire is open and mentoring, not
top-down, distant, or self-justified. Instead of idolizing
leadership or expecting superhuman perfection, honest companions
and humble guides will do just fine. Any institution or
organization with long-term vision must blend the voices and
experiences of the emerging generation, if for no other reason
than for its own survival. The future of the church depends on
walking this road together.
Read other articles by:
Verhulst, Kari Jo
Zylstra-Garth, Laura
Johnson, Jennifer
Shriver, Jeff
Lafferty, Jill Carroll
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Read other articles by:
Verhulst, Kari Jo
Zylstra-Garth, Laura
Johnson, Jennifer
Shriver, Jeff
Lafferty, Jill Carroll
|