Potential Ecclesiology: A Vision For Adolescent Contribution

Thesis advisor: Jane Regan === This dissertation argues that adults need to develop a potential ecclesiology of youth such that adults envision, anticipate, and empower adolescent contribution to the faith community. A potential ecclesiology begins when adults see adolescents for what he or she may...

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Main Author: Ketcham, Sharon Galgay
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Boston College 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2345/3860
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spelling ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_1014622019-05-10T07:35:13Z Potential Ecclesiology: A Vision For Adolescent Contribution Ketcham, Sharon Galgay Thesis advisor: Jane Regan Text thesis 2014 Boston College English electronic application/pdf This dissertation argues that adults need to develop a potential ecclesiology of youth such that adults envision, anticipate, and empower adolescent contribution to the faith community. A potential ecclesiology begins when adults see adolescents for what he or she may contribute and invite them to join the church's work in the world for the reign of God. Relationships are understood as the primary location for Christ's transforming activity among people and communities. Christianity is an ecclesial faith, and the mark of maturity includes learning to move from being with others to being for others, a shift from me to we. Therefore, belonging to a community where adolescents can learn to live as Christians with others, cultivating both knowledge and competence, is vital to a maturing faith in Christ. In light of this, a potential ecclesiology compels adults to invite adolescents into the unfolding drama as growing contributors to God's redeeming work in the world. A potential ecclesiology is somewhat antithetical to a service-based youth ministry, which is a dominant model among contemporary Protestant churches characterized by adults providing a service (both content and experiences of faith) for adolescents to passively receive. Individual faith formation is the primary objective. Research verifies a disparity between increased efforts and resources allocated to support adolescent faith formation and the high attrition of post-high school participation in faith communities. When reconciled, this assumed problem of retention is actually a problem of integration, revealing that the service-based model resists inviting adolescents to join with a local community of faith as contributors to God's redemptive purposes in the world. Built on a biblical and theological foundation, this dissertation argues that fostering a maturing Christian faith is bound to the vital relationship between the person and the community where maturity is both personal and communal. Positive Youth Development literature affirms the central role of others in adolescent development broadly, which includes changes in knowing who I am (independence) alongside who I am with others (interdependence). Adolescents who are "thriving" are those who contribute to the larger purposes of the community. Additionally, a social theory of learning takes seriously doing the faith with others as a means of learning, which includes exposure to and engagement with the larger purpose of the faith community. Faith communities support a maturing faith by contextually enacting five values: communal memory, responsible mutuality, burgeoning maturity, generative relationships, and imaginative contribution. Attending to the adolescent's experience with the community and creating avenues for authentic contribution should guide a church's vision and practices and thus enact a potential ecclesiology of youth. adolescent spirituality Communities of Practice ecclesiology faith formation Positive Youth Development youth ministry Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2014. Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Discipline: Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry. 415683 http://hdl.handle.net/2345/3860
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic adolescent spirituality
Communities of Practice
ecclesiology
faith formation
Positive Youth Development
youth ministry
spellingShingle adolescent spirituality
Communities of Practice
ecclesiology
faith formation
Positive Youth Development
youth ministry
Ketcham, Sharon Galgay
Potential Ecclesiology: A Vision For Adolescent Contribution
description Thesis advisor: Jane Regan === This dissertation argues that adults need to develop a potential ecclesiology of youth such that adults envision, anticipate, and empower adolescent contribution to the faith community. A potential ecclesiology begins when adults see adolescents for what he or she may contribute and invite them to join the church's work in the world for the reign of God. Relationships are understood as the primary location for Christ's transforming activity among people and communities. Christianity is an ecclesial faith, and the mark of maturity includes learning to move from being with others to being for others, a shift from me to we. Therefore, belonging to a community where adolescents can learn to live as Christians with others, cultivating both knowledge and competence, is vital to a maturing faith in Christ. In light of this, a potential ecclesiology compels adults to invite adolescents into the unfolding drama as growing contributors to God's redeeming work in the world. A potential ecclesiology is somewhat antithetical to a service-based youth ministry, which is a dominant model among contemporary Protestant churches characterized by adults providing a service (both content and experiences of faith) for adolescents to passively receive. Individual faith formation is the primary objective. Research verifies a disparity between increased efforts and resources allocated to support adolescent faith formation and the high attrition of post-high school participation in faith communities. When reconciled, this assumed problem of retention is actually a problem of integration, revealing that the service-based model resists inviting adolescents to join with a local community of faith as contributors to God's redemptive purposes in the world. Built on a biblical and theological foundation, this dissertation argues that fostering a maturing Christian faith is bound to the vital relationship between the person and the community where maturity is both personal and communal. Positive Youth Development literature affirms the central role of others in adolescent development broadly, which includes changes in knowing who I am (independence) alongside who I am with others (interdependence). Adolescents who are "thriving" are those who contribute to the larger purposes of the community. Additionally, a social theory of learning takes seriously doing the faith with others as a means of learning, which includes exposure to and engagement with the larger purpose of the faith community. Faith communities support a maturing faith by contextually enacting five values: communal memory, responsible mutuality, burgeoning maturity, generative relationships, and imaginative contribution. Attending to the adolescent's experience with the community and creating avenues for authentic contribution should guide a church's vision and practices and thus enact a potential ecclesiology of youth. === Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2014. === Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. === Discipline: Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry.
author Ketcham, Sharon Galgay
author_facet Ketcham, Sharon Galgay
author_sort Ketcham, Sharon Galgay
title Potential Ecclesiology: A Vision For Adolescent Contribution
title_short Potential Ecclesiology: A Vision For Adolescent Contribution
title_full Potential Ecclesiology: A Vision For Adolescent Contribution
title_fullStr Potential Ecclesiology: A Vision For Adolescent Contribution
title_full_unstemmed Potential Ecclesiology: A Vision For Adolescent Contribution
title_sort potential ecclesiology: a vision for adolescent contribution
publisher Boston College
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2345/3860
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