Home » Resources » Scholarship on Teaching » "Formation in the Worlds of Theological Education: Moving from 'What' to 'How'"
Scholarship
March 29, 2017
“Formation in the Worlds of Theological Education: Moving from ‘What’ to ‘How’”
- Author
- Hess, Lisa M.
- Publisher
- Teaching Theology and Religion 11, no. 1 (2008): 14-23
Theological educators in church and academy alike continue to ask, "What is formation for ministry?" Dissatisfaction has increased within all participants of theological education – faculty, students, administrators, pastors, and church professionals. Temporarily postponing the "what" of formation, this article explores the dissatisfaction with formation language in terms of one critical dissonance: the improbable quest for a pastoral identity amidst the observable reality of multiple identities, chosen and imposed. A constructive response crafted by identities-in-practice, as configured by disciplined spiritual stewardship, gives both critical and contemplative guidance for a fuller participation by all in Christian formation. Formation then becomes defined with a publicly theological coherence: the "shaping-being-shaped" primarily by the Holy in the worlds mutually configured within improvised, risked service.