Barry K. Morris

Hopeful Realism in Urban Ministry


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will be all, and which cannot rest until all is fulfilled and until peace with justice with dignity for all is included.20 There is also the critical penchant of realism to press the profession of hope for its actual basis, that its practice be more or other than that of mere wishful thinking. If it is wishful thinking or ungrounded aspirations that reign, then the “dashed hopes” of disillusionment are inevitable.

      Hopeful Realism for Urban Ministry: Animating Contrast Awareness

      There are helpful reflections on the meaning of hope and realism combined. Douglas Ottati writes a whole book by the title of Hopeful Realism. Therein he asserts

      For our purposes hope and realism are summoned to support the pervasive need of urban ministries to take note of what is happening in their ministries in the city, with all of the rough and tough conditions of survival, coping, facing the same old oppressive and lonely situations upon release from prison, hospital, or any of a number of post-recovery challenges following a short or long-term stay in treatment facilities. Hope and realism are combined to gain the fuller force of synergism, the uncovering and release of perhaps neglected and even repressed energies for change. Hence Ottati prefaces the above perspective of hopeful realism with this theological summary:

      It is not only at the level of analysis or a detached reflection that a hopeful realism can be professed. Prayer offers the complementary if not deeper and wider resources of confession. That is, confessing the limits of one’s own and one’s ministerial situation along with and grounded in the catalyst of recognizing and willingly honoring a contrast-awareness arousal—an awareness that takes negative experiences, especially of indignities and inequalities, seriously and persistently as to be resolved, with a socially just outcome. I know not of a more articulate statement describing this core concept than that of the late Catholic theologian and biblical scholar, Edward Schillebeeckx. Worthy of elaboration, he professes:

      Anticipating later elaborations, there are three key distinctions of this original version of the prayer to note. It is in the first person plural, not merely “me”; it names the courage to change to be