| Practical Theology: What Will It Become by John H. Perkins Father Westerhoff, and Episcopal priest, is professor of religion and education at Duke University Divinity School in Durham, North Carolina. This article appeared in the Christian Century, February 1-8, 1984, p. 116. Copyright by the Christian Century Foundation and used by permission. Current articles and subscription information can be found at www.christiancentury.org. This material was prepared for Religion Online by Ted & Winnie Brock. Only a few years ago this article might have been titled
  “Practical Theology: Will It Be?” Today there is good reason to believe that
  indeed it will. Now the question has shifted to “What will it become?” In
  this early stage, there are numerous formulations and recommendations. Thus
  far the conversation has tended to be centered in the academy; my intent is
  to make it more public. | 
Although my
thinking is inspired by the seminal work Practical Theology: The Emerging
Field in Theology, Church, and World, edited by Don Browning (Harper &
Row, 1983), my thoughts essentially are an attempt to make sense of what I do,
and thereby add one more opinion to the important effort to reform and renew
theological education. While I owe much to the stimulating ideas of Don
Browning, David Tracy and James Fowler in Practical Theology, I wish to
attempt a small, constructive personal contribution rather than to enter into
dialogue with them. That will need to come later.
Obviously, all
of us are influenced by both our past experiences and our present activities.
More of my life has been spent in parishes than in theological schools. Even
now, as a professor in a school of divinity, I spend two days a week in parish
ministry. As a result. I understand myself first as a parish priest and second
as an academic. My faith in Jesus as the Christ is translated into a commitment
to life in the church -- life in a community of faith called to live in, but
not of, the world as a transformer of culture. I understand my role as priest
to be that of a bearer of the community’s symbols, a mystagogue who leads
others into mystery and a hermeneut who, as an instrument of knowing and
interpretation, represents God to humanity and humanity to God. I understand my
role as a professor in a theological school to consist of helping the church,
critically and constructively, to reflect on its life and work so that it may
be faithful in its mission, and of helping to form and educate people for
various ministries in the church.
However, since
first joining a theological faculty more than a decade ago, I have been
troubled by the “professional” understanding of ministry that emerged in
Protestant churches and their seminaries a quarter-century ago.
Having left
behind an interpretation of profession as a response to a personal call from
God, along with the church’s corresponding recognition of personal charisma (a
God-given grace), Protestants adopted a modern secular view of profession as
the possession of the specialized knowledge and skills necessary to qualify for
institutional approval and, thereby, employment. Indeed, today most Protestant
clergy think of themselves as professionals, and the Doctor of Ministry degree
has formalized a credentializing process for the profession.
Over the past
25 years, theological education has followed two divergent models: some
faculty, while committed to the church’s ministry, have adopted a
graduate-school-of-arts-and-sciences model of education; others, while
committed to scholarship, have adopted a professional-school model.
While I recall
reading about the post-Schleiermacher tendency to understand practical theology
as made up of numerous dimensions -- the liturgical, moral, pastoral,
spiritual, ecclesial and catechetical -- within a clerical paradigm, I
experienced it as a number of nonintegrated, specific disciplines of
ministerial studies separated from other isolated disciplines dispersed
throughout a confused theological curriculum.
I discovered
that the liturgical concern among some had become preaching; among others,
techniques for conducting worship; and among still others, historical modes of
worship. Even in those schools keeping the study of liturgics in the curriculum
(typically understood as the history, theology and practice of worship and/or
preaching), those who taught theory typically did not teach practice. Further,
separate specialists in liturgics and homiletics were being trained,
professional organizations for each created, and journals to support these
specialized fields established. The pastoral concern had become counseling,
usually adopting a medical model informed by secular psychology and therapeutic
practice. This separate discipline then developed its own training program and
certification system known as clinical pastoral education (CPE). It trained its
own specialists, offered its own degrees and had its own faculty, professional
associations and journals.
The
catechetical concern became Christian education, typically following a
schooling model informed by secular pedagogy. It too developed its own degree
program, granting master’s degree in religious education, and establishing a
group of specialists, lay directors and ordained ministers working in the
field. Along with this new specialty came the usual graduate programs, degrees,
faculties, professional associations and journals. The spiritual dimension, I
found, was ignored in most Protestant seminaries, but where it was retained,
spirituality turned into either training in technique or a course or two in
historical theology. The moral concern was taken from the practical field, and
subsumed under systematic theology, creating a new field of theology and
ethics.
Ecclesiology
tended to adopt a business-management model informed by organizational
development. While this specialized field assumed various names, such as the
care of the parish,” it focused on organization, administration and, sometimes,
the sociology of religion. Concerned primarily with institutional survival, it
included leadership understood as church management, evangelism understood as
church growth, stewardship understood as church finance, and so on.
Thus
ministerial studies, a conglomerate of subdepartments and specialties, came to
exist in ‘competition” with other faculty departments or divisions. More
significantly, these studies tended to focus on “how-to” concerns, or the
application of what was taught in the “theoretical’ fields of biblical,
historical and theological-ethical studies (each also separate from the others
and supported by its own professional associations, journals, degree programs
and faculties). Thus a devastating gulf divided theory and practice.
Ministerial studies tended to become devoid of theological foundations and
neglectful of spiritual and moral concerns. They essentially were intended to
provide future clergy with the skills necessary for employment as the
professional ministers of the church.
| I have never been happy with this situation, just
  as I have never been satisfied to be known solely as a Christian educator,
  restricted to predominantly applied courses training professional educators
  and ministers for parish education understood fundamentally as church
  schooling. Before I had any content for the title, I thought of myself as a
  practical theologian whose function it was to integrate theology and the
  various dimensions of ministry as they relate to church and society. | 
Theology I
understand to be an articulation of a faith community’s experiential-reflective
knowledge of God for the ends of living together as a sign of God’s presence in
history, and of discerning and doing God’s will in the world as a witness to
God’s intentions for history. Therefore, theology comprises three related
processes of reflection and discourse: the foundational, the constructive and
the practical.
Foundational
theology, rooted and grounded in God’s revelation in the past, is a historical
mode of reflection that, by exploring the origins of the Christian faith
community, attempts to answer for each generation the fundamental question of
what it is to be Christian.
Constructive
theology, aware of God’s continuing revelation in the present, is a
hermeneutical mode of reflection that, by exploring our particular historical,
social and cultural situation in the light of the church’s tradition, attempts
dialectically to make sense of both our contemporary experience-knowledge and
our tradition.
Practical
theology, emerging out of life in a faith community, is a doxological mode of
reflection that, by placing itself within the context of the church’s service
to God, attempts to facilitate the goal of a faithful life in the present on
behalf of God’s future. As such, practical theology is composed of six
dimensions. Although each is distinguishable, none is separate from the others.
Indeed, they are necessarily integrated, for, properly understood, each is
simply one doorway into and expression of a single whole. These six
interrelated dimensions are the liturgical, the moral, the spiritual, the
pastoral, the ecclesial and the catechetical.
| The liturgical dimension (life as worship) focuses on life
  in a professing community. It includes both the community’s cultic or ritual
  life (repetitive, symbolic actions expressive of the community’s sacred
  story) and its people’s daily work (vocation or ‘profession”) in the
  world. | 
The moral dimension (life as seeking justice and
peace) focuses on life in a witnessing community. The moral includes both the
people’s character -- their perceptions, dispositions, intentions, attitudes
and values -- and their conscience -- the processes by which they, as believers
in Jesus Christ and members of his church, discern the will of God and, guided
by the community’s ethical norms and principles, decide faithful action within
particular moral situations.
The spiritual
dimension (life as relationship) focuses on life in a praying community: it
includes both interior experience -- the direct encounter with God resulting in
a personal knowledge of God’s love -- and exterior manifestation --
daily life lived in an ever-deepening love relationship with God, or life as a
testimony to the sifts of the spirit.
The pastoral
dimension (life as caring) focuses on life in a serving community. It includes
both consciousness, or the embracing of suffering and the identifying with the
needy of the world, and sacrificial love: the capacity to live with
others in relationships of healing, sustaining, guidance and reconciliation,
expressed in caring for the sick, the needy. the poor, the hungry, the lonely
and the captive.
The ecclesial
dimension (life as being) focuses on life in a sacramental community. It
includes both community life, lived as a sign of God’s grace expressed through
a nurturing, caring family, and institutional life, lived in society in
stewardship of God’s gifts and witnessing to God’s intentions.
The catechetical
dimension (life as becoming) focuses on life in a learning community. It
includes both formation through evangelization and enculturation -- the
processes by which we are converted and initiated into the church and its
tradition and thereby come to acknowledge ourselves as a people in covenant
with God -- and education, or those processes of actualization that help
us to live out our baptism by making the church’s faith more vital, conscious
and active in our lives; by deepening our relationship to God; and by realizing
our vocation in the world so that God’s saving activity may be manifested in
persons and in the church.
Through the
formational processes, the tradition is acquired, sustained and deepened. The
aim of such processes is to conserve and provide roots in the past. It is an
intentional, experiential, nurturing process within every aspect of parish
life. Further, it is foundational to the whole catechetical process, and is
essential and developmentally possible for children.
Through the
educational processes, people critically examine the tradition, reshape it and
apply it to life. Such education’s aim is to transform and provide openness to
the future. It is an intentional, reflective, converting process related to
every aspect of parish life. Secondary to the formational processes in that it
necessarily follows experience in sequence, it is essential and developmentally
possible for most adolescents and adults.
To illustrate:
a person’s character is shaped or formed by life in community. It is both
foundational to and prior to conscience, for conscience combines the advocacy
of our visions and passionate convictions with the disinterested analysis
necessary for moral decision-making, the latter resulting from education.
Therefore, moral catechesis is concerned both with how our character is shaped
and how our conscience is educated.
A third
important responsibility for catechesis is its integrative, reflective task.
For example, within the liturgical dimension there is a possible estrangement
between the church’s worship and its action in the world. One essential task of
catechesis is to help the church prepare for meaningful worship by reflecting
on its life in the world. Another is to help it prepare for faithful action in
the world by reflecting on worship. In this way, catechesis can bring about the
integration of the two foci of the liturgical dimension.
Certainly, each
dimension of practical theology is expressed in each of the others. For
example, within the cultic-life foci of the liturgical dimension, the first
half of the ritual (the service of the Word) is intended to be catechetical.
Each dimension also contributes to each of the others. For example, the
character is fundamentally shaped through participation in the community’s rituals.
Equally
important, the two foci of each dimension of practical theology -- one in the
church and one in the world -- help to encourage a dialectical relationship
between the Christian faith community and other perspectives and efforts to
shape our common life.
My dream is
that the old divisions in ministerial studies, with their clerical emphasis and
their specialized disciplines such as Christian education, will dissolve, and
that a field of practical theology made up of people with broad theological
knowledge and a deep, holistic understanding of each dimension -- as well as a
focused concern for one dimension -- will emerge. Then all practical theology
courses would be team-taught and would aim at integration. In some cases, a
course in Christian initiation would integrate every dimension. Other classes
would integrate two dimensions, as I do now in courses on liturgical
catechesis, moral catechesis and spiritual catechesis. Each would integrate
theory and practice, foundational theology and secular disciplines, as well as
experience in church and society with reflection in the divinity school.
Of course, this
is just one person’s limited imagination and explication. Both conversation and
exploration must go on, The most difficult hurdle, of course, is the academy
itself. How it educates, hires and rewards its faculty members influences how
they behave. How its faculty designs its curriculum and determines its courses
influences what is taught, and by whom. Still, I hope that this article will
stimulate the process of forming the field of practical theology.