Barry K. Morris

Hopeful Realism in Urban Ministry


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and sinful, and hence we are certainly vulnerable; these characteristics provide the parameters and contours for the meaning of realism. Being finite, we are limited—limited by space, time, activities, influence, and the incapacity to control outcomes. Being ignorant, we do not know enough on any one subject to present all of the material on that subject. Being sinful, we think and act with our flaws, failures, and competing self-interests, rooted as these are in our egocentricity. Pretension is another way to name the propensity of human sinfulness. Pervading these realities, there is also the plain vulnerability of the human condition and the vulnerable institutions we create and that in turn, shape us.4 The first two of the above, which depict realism, are readily accepted by urban ministry practitioners, but further elaboration on sin is necessary.

      On Hope: Pressing the Limits

      The practices of hope suggest a wide and deep range of inter-disciplinary activity or even a sensible relaxation of activity for the sake of pacefulness and restored harmony. The linking of meditation, contemplation, and/or prayer to the spheres of being active in ministry has come of age though it has been present in and among the monastic traditions for centuries. Not alone, the new monasticism has retrieved and compellingly given fresh expressions.

      Hope and Realism Combined: Leaven of a Just Realm beyond Our Eager but Meager Strivings