{"id":5685,"date":"2022-02-01T02:00:30","date_gmt":"2022-02-01T02:00:30","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/learn.elca.org\/jle\/?p=5685"},"modified":"2022-02-02T16:22:53","modified_gmt":"2022-02-02T16:22:53","slug":"everyone-is-in-debt","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/learn.elca.org\/jle\/everyone-is-in-debt\/","title":{"rendered":"Everyone is In Debt!"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>[1] In June of 2019, I wrote a letter to the bishop of my synod<a href=\"#_edn1\" name=\"_ednref1\">[1]<\/a> after I was called into his office to let me know that I had been flagged by the larger denominational structure for \u201cindebtedness.\u201d I was extremely embarrassed by the situation: there I was, explaining <em>why<\/em> I was in debt, and if I was \u201cokay.\u201d I tried to explain that I did not have access to the same resources that my white counterparts had had in my own matriculation, and I told them that I had assumed that the reason that I had been called into the office was because I had done so well in my pastoral work. They, however, were much more concerned about whether I was living in a way that was <em>integrous<\/em>: whether I was living in line with <em>Vision and Expectations\u2019 <\/em>expectations of fiscal responsibility.<\/p>\n<p>[Editor\u2019s note: <em>Vision and Expectations<\/em> now has been retired and the ELCA Church Council has officially decided not to replace it with a new document until a need arises.\u00a0 However, this writer\u2019s experience explores the philosophical and theological issues that were raised about the origin and use of <em>Vision and Expectations<\/em>. \u00a0\u00a0The greater issues about student debt, inequities, how policies are created, and the nature of integrity are important issues for ethical and practical reflection.]<\/p>\n<p>[2] Student loan debt is skyrocketing in the United States,<a href=\"#_edn2\" name=\"_ednref2\">[2]<\/a> and unfortunately, seminarians around the country are not exempt from this reality. As the reality of seminarian (and pastor) financial indebtedness continues to be uncovered, there will have to be a radical reimagining of what it means to have \u201cintegrity.\u201d In the ELCA, <em>Vision and Expectations <\/em>and its corresponding adjudicatory practices linked the <em>ideal<\/em> of integrity to a minister\u2019s fiscal responsibility, which <em>unofficially<\/em> intimates the carrying of little to no debt. This paper will argue that under such parameters, an integrous minister will become much more difficult to locate considering rising seminarian debt costs, and moreover, that tying debt to financial privilege is ultimately a form of discrimination. This paper will describe the history, function, and layout of <em>Vision and Expectations. <\/em>Then it will outline the prescriptions for fiscal responsibility therein<em>. <\/em>Following, the paper will discuss data around seminary student indebtedness. Then, I will trace Aristotelian virtue cultivation, link it to <em>Vision and Expectations<\/em>, and expose the incompatibility of <em>Vision\u2019s <\/em>virtue model. Next, I will imagine a new theological vision of integrous living, which includes the reality of indebtedness, ultimately calling for this to be part of a new clergy ethics. Finally, I will situate myself in this and future work as a practical theologian.<\/p>\n<p>[3] Rev. Joseph M. Wagner, Executive Director of the Division for Ministry, introduced<em> Vision and Expectations <\/em>to the ELCA Church Council in 1990.<a href=\"#_edn3\" name=\"_ednref3\">[3]<\/a> The thought surrounding the document was to create a broader statement for conduct in dialogue with a previously existing discipline statement. In describing the document, Wagner said that \u201cit is not a juridical document that is to be used in an official sort of way. It is rather a document that describes the behavior of clergy. It is not a prescriptive document.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn4\" name=\"_ednref4\">[4]<\/a> The document was termed a \u201cteaching resource\u201d providing \u201ca teaching opportunity about the shared expectations which this church has of its ordained ministers.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn5\" name=\"_ednref5\">[5]<\/a> Rev. George W. Forell suggested that since \u201cmany seminary students [did] not have a Lutheran background\u2026a clear-cut statement of expectations [was] needed.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn6\" name=\"_ednref6\">[6]<\/a> Despite some pushback in the committee that people were \u201cvery distressed\u201d by the document, <em>Vision and Expectations <\/em>was adopted by the ELCA Church Council in October of 1990 and was recommended to be sent to \u201ccongregations, pastors, and seminaries of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn7\" name=\"_ednref7\">[7]<\/a> In 1993, the ELCA Church Council adopted a version of Vision and Expectations for lay people.<a href=\"#_edn8\" name=\"_ednref8\">[8]<\/a> In 1997, the \u201cboard of the Division for Ministry adopted \u2018Guidelines for the Use of Vision and Expectations in the ELCA Candidacy Process.\u2019\u201d<a href=\"#_edn9\" name=\"_ednref9\">[9]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[4] It was not until 2009 that there were any further changes made to <em>Vision and Expectations, <\/em>which centered around questions of same-sex unions and ministry; there was a move toward revising <em>Vision and Expectations <\/em>to be more inclusive of LGBTQ individuals.<a href=\"#_edn10\" name=\"_ednref10\">[10]<\/a> However, the problem around seminarian indebtedness remained untouched in any revisions to <em>Vision and Expectations.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>[5] <em>Vision and Expectations <\/em>was an agreement to which candidates for ministry were bound during candidacy, when ordained, and when seeking a new call, and while Rev. Wagner above suggested that it would not have juridical power, it is clear from people\u2019s seeking to revise it that it did hold sway in decisions of candidacy, ordination, and possible calls, and it must have had some juridical power for me to be called into the bishop\u2019s office concerning my indebtedness, which was expressly mentioned in <em>Vision and Expectations.<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>[6] <em>Vision and Expectations <\/em>was divided into four major headings, which are I. Call to Ordained Ministry; II. Faithfulness to the Church\u2019s Confession; III. Ordained Minister as Person and Example; and IV. Faithful Witness. Each of these major headings had applicable subheading material listed underneath.<\/p>\n<p>[7] When I was questioned in the meeting with the bishop, he simply said that during the routine ELCA background check, the bishop simply said that I was \u201cflagged for indebtedness.\u201d Background checks are done to ensure the safety of the congregation (mostly), and they are readily tied to a minister\u2019s not only being \u201csafe,\u201d but integrous as well.<\/p>\n<p>[8] The \u201cflagging\u201d did a lot to injure my confidence as a minister: instead of my being uplifted as an upstanding example of some of the new clergy in our Synod, who had been successful in a church with seemingly insurmountable odds, I was having to explain to two people that the debt that I had accrued was not because I was a rapscallion, but because I had tried to do the best that I could to prepare myself to be God\u2019s vessel, and that this undertaking cost a significant amount of money. Furthermore, I told them that I did not have some of the same opportunities that my white counterparts had had. Where their churches had endowments and were willing to support the financial costs of their members who wanted to go to seminary, I had to borrow money.\u00a0 There was <em>never <\/em>a time when I was in school of <em>any<\/em> kind where I had not had to work to supplement the cost of general and theological education. After the meeting, I felt utterly ashamed that I had done what I needed to get through school and that I somehow needed to defend my own integrity as a minister and student.<\/p>\n<p>[9] There was also a power dynamic in the room: I was \u201cinterviewed\u201d by the Bishop of the Synod, and the Synod Vice-President, the highest-ranking lay position in the Synod. They were both white, with high-powered jobs. I felt as if my wrist were being slapped for being in debt.<\/p>\n<p>[10] I was led to consider the question as to whether really leads to the greater question as to whether or not the denomination has confidence in <em>all<\/em> of its ministers, or just a select few who are deemed trustworthy because they have been afforded the privilege to have little to no debt? What are the parameters that decide what \u201cfiscal responsibility\u201d is? Is it the background check machine, or has a group of people gathered to uncritically make a list of what it means to be fiscally responsible? A plain reading of this requirement seems like this is not such a big issue, but it can easily become an issue when trustworthiness and integrity of the minister are questioned uncritically. When assumptions are made about <em>why<\/em> or <em>why not<\/em> a person is to be deemed fiscally irresponsible, people can often get hurt in the process.<\/p>\n<p>[11] According to a study by Auburn Seminary,<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>[i]n 1991, more than half of Master of Divinity students graduated with no educational debt. This decreased significantly to 37 percent in 2001, but the rate of decline slowed to 36 percent with no educational debt upon graduation. The average level of debt, for those graduates who borrowed, grew from $11,043 in 1991, to $25,018 in 2001 and $38,704 in 2011. The major concern for many is the rapid rise in those who are most indebted. In 201, 20 percent of graduates borrowed $30,000, or more. This had grown to 35 percent in 2011\u2026more theological students are [also] entering seminary with undergraduate debt.<a href=\"#_edn11\" name=\"_ednref11\">[11]<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Other data from the study showed the following debt numbers showing the distribution of \u201cM.Div. Graduates\u2019 Theological Debt in 2011:\u201d<a href=\"#_edn12\" name=\"_ednref12\">[12]<\/a> 36 percent owed nothing, 8 percent owed $1 to $10,000, 10 percent owed $10,000 to $20,000, 11 percent owed $20,000 to $30,000, 9 percent owed $30,000 to $40,000, 7 percent owed $40,000 to $50,000, and 19 percent owed over $50,000.<a href=\"#_edn13\" name=\"_ednref13\">[13]<\/a> These numbers are simply startling.<\/p>\n<p>[12] This study by Auburn cites many factors as to why seminary student debt is rising, including \u201cavailability of low-interest loans,\u201d which allow students to borrow large sums of federal money to fund their educations; \u201cchanging cultural attitudes toward debt,\u201d which suggest that borrowing money has become more widely acceptable by students and administrators alike; \u201cchanging theological school\/denominational financial aid opportunities,\u201d which mean that schools are not able to fund students in the ways that they have in the past; rising living costs, which lower the economic value of the money that schools <em>can <\/em>offer. <a href=\"#_edn14\" name=\"_ednref14\">[14]<\/a>\u00a0 Also at play are \u201cchanging student demographics;\u201d seminary\u2019s student population now consists of a larger population of older seminarians who are married with families and have significant financial obligations, rather than previously younger student populations, who were able to save more money by taking advantage of school amenities. <a href=\"#_edn15\" name=\"_ednref15\">[15]<\/a> In addition, the \u201cotherworldly attitudes,\u201d such as saying that \u201cGod will provide,\u201d often keep people from being realistic about the financial burden that they will have to bear. <a href=\"#_edn16\" name=\"_ednref16\">[16]<\/a>\u00a0 Finally, the \u201capproach of individual theological schools\u201d can play a pivotal role in determining the student\u2019s debt; quite frankly,\u00a0 often theological schools fail to commit to properly approaching debt, tuition, and living expenses, along with its awarded financial aid.<a href=\"#_edn17\" name=\"_ednref17\">[17]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[13] Certainly, Auburn\u2019s study places the responsibility directly in the hands of the borrower for their indebtedness, and that is not unreasonable. In fact, it is what the borrower should expect. But indebtedness should not be tied to the student\u2019s integrity as a person, in fact, many took on debt to follow what they perceived to be God\u2019s call, and to this end, Auburn does not ultimately place the responsibility of getting out of debt <em>just<\/em> on the borrower, but also on the theological institution.<a href=\"#_edn18\" name=\"_ednref18\">[18]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[14] The Episcopal Church has tried to take on the task of tackling seminarian debt as well. In one of its periodicals, the Episcopal Church lifts its distinctiveness in carrying the gospel, while simultaneously acknowledging the debt of its seminarians, saying that such debt weighs down the pastor in their ministries and personal lives:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>In a survey of the class of 2009 at 11 Episcopal seminaries, two-thirds of the students had debt. The average debt was $48,978 only halfway through their training. By the time they graduated last spring, their projected debt load average nearly $59,000. The debt repayments and debt service on such loans totals more than $12,500 per year. Meanwhile, the annual median compensation package (including housing allowance) for new Episcopal clergy is $48,584. It\u2019s like having a mortgage with no house to show for it.<a href=\"#_edn19\" name=\"_ednref19\">[19]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>While this data takes place a little earlier than the Auburn study, the seminarians in the Episcopalian church, by 2009, were already at the topmost rung of the Auburn study\u2019s \u201cover $50k\u201d designation, so that by 2011, the students who were halfway through their programs in 2009 were even <em>more <\/em>indebted by the time of the release of the Auburn study. Reasons that the Episcopal Church cites for seminarian indebtedness are both similar and different to Auburn\u2019s findings: \u201cincreased costs of undergraduate and seminary education; a very recent trend of younger seminarians who do not have accumulated financial resources; lack of adequate funding sources for those pursuing a Master of Divinity degree in preparation for full-time ministry.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn20\" name=\"_ednref20\">[20]<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>[15] While Auburn and the Episcopal church both cite rising costs, their findings are opposite in that where Auburn speaks of older students with more financial responsibilities, the Episcopal Church\u2019s experience is that of younger seminarians without accrued financial resources. They both speak of rising costs, and it can be assumed that the need to borrow is ultimately due to lack of financial resources to provide for ministerial aspirations.<\/p>\n<p>[16] These findings are not in conflict, but instead speak to the widely debilitating and encompassing nature of seminarian debt. While some students are able to receive aid from sponsoring parishes and diocesan sources, the amount of resources varies widely.<a href=\"#_edn21\" name=\"_ednref21\">[21]<\/a> This can be summed up by an Episcopalian seminarian who said, \u201cIf only the rich or those who can find rich people to support them can answer the call of God, then we\u2019re not giving our Church a fair shake at all the gifts God has provided us.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn22\" name=\"_ednref22\">[22]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[17] In the Journal of Lutheran Ethics, Joy Coltvet addressed the seminarian debt crisis in the ELCA back in 2012.<a href=\"#_edn23\" name=\"_ednref23\">[23]<\/a> In addition to revealing similar statistics that this paper has already mentioned, Coltvet shed light on what she calls the \u201csystemic brokenness\u2019 of the debt system:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Over four years, a yearly cost of $35,000 adds up quickly to an insurmountable amount of debt. The greatest indicator of student debt graduating from seminary is the amount of debt a student brings into seminary. However, this is not due only to a student\u2019s level of responsibility or irresponsibility; it relates also to a whole system of privilege that, in fact, raises additional ethical questions.<\/p>\n<p>Who are those who tend to bring less college\/university debt? They are (1) students who have parents whose wealth can pay for a college degree and (2) students who excel academically and who earn multiple scholarships. These students are likely to receive these same debt-reducing rewards at the seminary as well\u2014they will still have parents who are likely to be able to support them generally or in times of crisis, and they will receive the same types of academic merit grants at the seminary level by schools anxious to attract gifted students.<a href=\"#_edn24\" name=\"_ednref24\">[24]<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Moreover, specifically in the ELCA, debt makes it increasingly difficult for the disadvantaged to be able to be viable pastors in the denomination. According to Pastor Mark Olsen,<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>the poor and disadvantaged, especially those who are young adults, have little chance of becoming pastors (or other rostered leaders) in our church. The obstacles are too many; the resources available and dedicated to enable them to do so, too few. And most of us just shrug and say, \u2018well, that\u2019s the way it is.\u2019<a href=\"#_edn25\" name=\"_ednref25\">[25]<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>[18] Adding insult to injury is the reality that people of color also suffer disadvantages when it comes to access to opportunities of funding:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Students who bring debt to seminary are more likely to acquire debt in seminary because there is not the same foundational wealth, safety nets, or institution-funded resources for certain students. This is a particularly challenging question in our complex U.S. culture in which people of color have systematically been prevented from gaining wealth, financial security, and the kinds of early educational resources that white students receive.<a href=\"#_edn26\" name=\"_ednref26\">[26]<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Coltvet also zeroed in on the crux of the argument that the doors of service to the church are purported to swing open in the ELCA, but the reality is that debilitating student debt often precludes students of color from participation.<a href=\"#_edn27\" name=\"_ednref27\">[27]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[19] In the ELCA, 83 percent of 2014 Master of Divinity graduates had some form of debt. Forty-five percent had debt before coming to seminary, and seventy-eight left seminary in debt. Forty-Four percent of the graduating students had between $10,000 and $50,000 in debt, while seventeen percent of the graduating class had between $50,000 $70,000. Sixteen percent of the graduating class had debt greater than $70,000.<a href=\"#_edn28\" name=\"_ednref28\">[28]<\/a> Like the Episcopalians, the rate of student debt repayment far outpaced the beginning salary of the first-call fulltime pastorate.<a href=\"#_edn29\" name=\"_ednref29\">[29]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[20] There has been much research on this topic, and with this research in the ELCA having been done on the topic in 2015, by now, the research is <em>almost<\/em> dated: student debt rates are continuing to climb nationally, and it would stand to reason that the data on this issue needs to be revisited in the very near future, to generate more accurate data.<\/p>\n<p>[21] Importantly, is under the context of this data that <em>Vision and Expectations <\/em>stood. I would argue that it resembled an Aristotelian code of ethics, both in its purpose, and in flaw. Aristotle\u2019s <em>Nicomachean Ethics<a href=\"#_edn30\" name=\"_ednref30\"><strong>[30]<\/strong><\/a><\/em> is concerned with the human\u2019s attaining the ultimate good, which is happiness.<a href=\"#_edn31\" name=\"_ednref31\">[31]<\/a>\u00a0 Happiness is considered by Aristotle to be the most excellent thing in accord with virtue, and this ultimate good attained is a concrete good\u2014a <em>practical <\/em>and real good that is attained through the examination of things that are readily observable.<a href=\"#_edn32\" name=\"_ednref32\">[32]<\/a> Attaining the ultimate good is done through the <em>intellectual and moral cultivation of virtue<\/em>, with the belief that each person (within reason) has the ability to control themselves (and subsequent emotional passions), and is thus able to be oriented toward a good and serious life.<a href=\"#_edn33\" name=\"_ednref33\">[33]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[22] In a preface to the document, then Presiding Bishop Mark Hanson stated:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><em>Vision and Expectations\u2014Ordained Ministers in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America<\/em> expresses the church\u2019s vision for ordained ministry and the <u>high expectations <\/u>it places on those who serve in this way. This document outlines the importance of the ordained minister\u2019s <u>faithfulness<\/u> to the church\u2019s confession, <u>leadership<\/u> through faithful service and holy living and faithful witness to the Gospel of Jesus Christ.<a href=\"#_edn34\" name=\"_ednref34\">[34]<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Though the foundational methodology governing Aristotle\u2019s work and the work of <em>Vision and Expectations <\/em>are vastly different, they were both still dealing with the <em>cultivation<\/em> of certain behavior habits. Both Aristotle <em>and <\/em>the ELCA were seeking to cultivate virtuous or <em>faithful<\/em> living in service to the larger community. Aristotle\u2019s method of virtue cultivation included understanding of the mean, which was finding the center between several different poles of action.<a href=\"#_edn35\" name=\"_ednref35\">[35]<\/a> The eleven moral virtues that Aristotle seeks to cultivate are courage, moderation, liberality, magnificence, greatness of soul, ambition, gentleness, friendliness, truthfulness, wittiness, and justice. The intellectual virtues include technical knowledge, practical reason, and contemplation.<\/p>\n<p>[23] As mentioned above, <em>Vision and Expectations<\/em> was broken into four major headings, and it seems as if the first heading of \u201cCall to Ordained Ministry\u201d is supported by the three other major headings. In short, the other three offer the <em>how<\/em> to understand the way in which one lives out their call to ordained ministry. To this end, there are also supporting expectations or virtues to ensure that these are properly lived out. They are integrity and trustworthiness, trustworthiness in relationships, trustworthiness in beginning, sustaining, and ending marriages or same-gender relationships, trustworthiness in sexual conduct, faithful witness through evangelism, compassion, confession, hospitality, peacemaking, justice, and stewardship of the earth. Aristotle has eleven moral virtues. The ELCA appeared to have thirteen. These do not have how-to instructions, like Aristotle\u2019s does, but they are an outward sign of balanced and faithful living within the community.<\/p>\n<p>[24] The topic of fiscal responsibility (indebtedness) came under the heading \u201cHoly Living,\u201d which states that \u201c[t]he ordained minister is to be an example of holy living so that the ordained minister\u2019s life does not become an impediment to the hearing of the gospel or a scandal to the community of faith. The qualities of such a life include the following:\u201d<a href=\"#_edn36\" name=\"_ednref36\">[36]<\/a><\/p>\n<p><em>Integrity and Trustworthiness<\/em><\/p>\n<blockquote><p>The ordained minister is expected to be honest and forthright in dealings with others while protecting privileged and confidential communications. The ordained minister should strive to develop a public reputation for integrity and to nurture trustworthy personal relationships. Ordained ministers must avoid conduct that is dishonest, deceptive, duplicitous or manipulative of others for personal benefit or gain.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>The ordained minister is expected to be fiscally responsible and is to be a faithful steward of time, talents, and possessions. The ordained minister is to be an example to the community of generous giving.<a href=\"#_edn37\" name=\"_ednref37\">[37]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Fiscal responsibility is tied here to <em>integrity <\/em>and what it means to be <em>trustworthy. <\/em>Aristotle does not speak of integrity, but he does speak about <em>truthfulness<\/em>, suggesting simply that someone that has the virtue of truthfulness is simply a \u201clover of the truth,\u201d and that a person who genuinely is cultivating the virtue will tell the truth both when it is convenient and when it is not.<a href=\"#_edn38\" name=\"_ednref38\">[38]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[25] Aristotle\u2019s truthfulness is preferred over the ELCA\u2019s model of integrity because Aristotle\u2019s model does not place financial parameters on what it means to tell the truth, or to cultivate the virtue of truthfulness.\u00a0 Moreover, I assert that it may be easier for people who are either aspiring ELCA ministers or are currently ordained with debt but have not yet been flagged to be able to be honest about how hard it is to live with debt, without having to be silent for fear of being called before an ELCA authority to account for their sins of indebtedness.<\/p>\n<p>[26] Aristotle\u2019s virtue model has a flaw, however. His school of learning, where he invented his virtue ethic was a place that was available only to a select few who had the resources and ability to withdraw from the hardness of daily work and toil. Aristotle\u2019s model was one that allowed for a (male) student to leave his already carefree life, and cultivate his virtues from youth to adulthood, which had already begun in his highborn well-to-do family. Aristotle would leave the responsibility of ruling the state in the hands of these privileged men.<a href=\"#_edn39\" name=\"_ednref39\">[39]<\/a> Aristotle\u2019s flaw is one of <em>process: <\/em>who makes all the decisions, which will trickle down to the masses? His rich, privileged, and insulated students. To be fair, Aristotle does acknowledge that wealth and privilege derive from moral <em>luck<\/em> which makes virtue attainable.<a href=\"#_edn40\" name=\"_ednref40\">[40]<\/a> He also notes that this is at least more democratic in a democracy than in an aristocracy. Luck is a far sight better than birthright privilege, but even this improvement can stand some critique: is there ever a question as to who is often the one anointed in our society to be deemed \u201clucky?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>[27] If we rewind back to 1990, the decision to implement <em>Vision and Expectation<\/em> was done by a few powerful people. While they had been imbued with power from the denomination, can it be said with certainty that the policies that they created without critical nuance, tying integrity and fiscal responsibility together, were representative of those who were not also in the room? While Aristotle meant well, and we can still even find great inspiration in his virtue ethic, there were many people who were left out of the conversation; hence this was a flaw in <em>Vision and Expectations.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>[28] Am I saying that there does not need to be any accountability, and that virtue cultivation, or faith and corresponding behavior cultivation is negative? No. What I <em>am<\/em> saying is that there always needs to be a representative group of people in the room who help the powerful make these kinds of decisions. I would go ever further to say that tying fiscal responsibility would not be <em>overtly<\/em> wrong if there were not hidden loopholes and unwritten rules that were set to trap unsuspecting pastoral practitioners. I was caught unaware, not knowing that the ELCA\u2019s definition of \u201cfiscal responsibility\u201d could be interpreted at that time to include having too much student debt. I was paying the loan payments on time, but that did not matter. It seems to me that the paying of the obligations is what constitutes responsibility, and hence, integrity, rather than just <em>having<\/em> the debt in the first place.<a href=\"#_edn41\" name=\"_ednref41\">[41]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[29] Furthermore, I am in a privileged position. I can pay my loan payments each month, but there are others who simply cannot, for different reasons. Does this make them bad people who are not trustworthy or integrous? I think not. I would say, rather, that they are probably victims of the broken system.<\/p>\n<p>[30] One of Coltvet\u2019s final questions comes to mind: how can the ELCA say that <em>all <\/em>the baptized might be called by God to serve as pastors, regardless of race and class, when the statistics suggest that people with less means are precluded from serving?<a href=\"#_edn42\" name=\"_ednref42\">[42]<\/a> When John the Baptist was in the wilderness baptizing people by the Jordan River, while clothed in camel\u2019s hair and a leather belt, he announced the coming of One who was coming after him, whose sandals he was not worthy to untie.<a href=\"#_edn43\" name=\"_ednref43\">[43]<\/a> The question that we must ask in light of the Lutheran tenet which states that we are justified <em>by grace <\/em>through faith, is, <em>who <\/em>is worthy to untie the sandals of Jesus? <em>Who <\/em>is worthy to proclaim Jesus? Those with the least amount of loan debt, or is the real answer <em>no one? <\/em>No one can say, \u201cI am worthy to come to do this work of Jesus, because of who I am and how much resource I have been afforded.\u201d No! We respond to the work of Christ in our lives by living into our respective calls, and it does not matter how much debt we have. What matters is the condition of our hearts. \u00a0Martin Luther, in his Lectures on Galatians said,<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Therefore, the Christian remains in pure humility, feeling sinful in a real and true fashion, worthy of wrath, the judgment of God, and eternal death\u2026through [Christ] the Christian rises against the feeling of divine wrath and judgment and believes in the love of the Father, not for one\u2019s own sake but for the sake of Christ the beloved. Thus, it is certain how faith justifies without works and how the imputation of righteousness is necessary. Sins remain in us, which God particularly hates. Because of them, it is necessary that we have the imputation of righteousness, which occurs for us on account of Christ, who was given to us and is grasped by us in faith. Meanwhile, as long as we are alive, we are supported and nourished at the bosom of divine mercy and forbearance, until the body of sin (Rom. 6:6) is abolished and we are raised up as new beings on that day.<a href=\"#_edn44\" name=\"_ednref44\">[44]<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>[31] Luther makes no distinction between who receives the gift of God through Christ. <em>All<\/em> need God\u2019s righteousness, regardless of earthly disposition. Moreover, <em>forbearance <\/em>has become a financial term in relation to the inability to repay one\u2019s student loans because of hardship.<a href=\"#_edn45\" name=\"_ednref45\">[45]<\/a> Forbearance is patience from the entity who is owed. Luther\u2019s depiction of forbearance, which comes from God, is given to <em>all<\/em>, not just those with student loan debt. It is the hardship of sin that brings <em>all<\/em> to the bosom of God. In short, <em>all <\/em>are indebted, and what will matter in our service to God is not how much our student loans are, but whether we have yielded to God\u2019s call and allowed the righteousness of God to become our righteousness through faith.<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Who shall ascend the hill of the Lord? And who shall stand in his holy place? Those who have clean hands and pure hearts, who do not lift up their souls to what is false, and do not swear deceitfully. They will receive blessing from the Lord, and vindication from the God of their salvation.<a href=\"#_edn46\" name=\"_ednref46\">[46]<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>[32] This Psalm is a form of virtuous cultivation as well, but like Aristotle, the cleanliness is not tied to access to resources, but to how one <em>lives<\/em>: the condition of their hearts. Truthfulness is tied to purity of living and intention to live into God\u2019s truth. At the end of the day, however, we cannot achieve this purity on our own; it is with God\u2019s help that we find worthiness. All are in bondage to sin and death, and consequently, we are all indebted to God\u2019s grace in and through Jesus Christ. With this universal indebtedness, we do not have the liberty to reason in silos about what constitutes integrity. We need the assent and participation of the community to reason together: Aristotle believed that virtue required wealth, and thusly, it was the role of the senate to make sure that had enough money to avoid debt and still have leisure time. For Aristotle, the \u201cdamned pagan\u201d according to Luther, it was not about being saved by God, but about society (community) stepping up and helping people have what they need so that they can also live virtuous lives.<a href=\"#_edn47\" name=\"_ednref47\">[47]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[33] Coltvet\u2019s prescription for the student debt crisis is to point to the ELCA\u2019s history of funding theological education for anyone who has been called. This is ultimately a reversal of values, in that the burden of funding one\u2019s education is not on the one who is called into ministry, but continues to be on the granting denominational institution.<a href=\"#_edn48\" name=\"_ednref48\">[48]<\/a> Seminaries, to this end, are undertaking the difficult work of discussing how their resources are allocated, how to be more transparent about money, creating funds for students to defray cost of attendance, and empowering students to find ways to finance their education <em>before<\/em> they begin to matriculate.<a href=\"#_edn49\" name=\"_ednref49\">[49]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[34] This reversal of values or shifting of responsibility to the institution that has both the power and the means to make life easier for its ministers is really an issue of justice. The <em>Vision and Expectations <\/em>document was a one-way set of values to which ministers and lay people alike are held. But what would it mean for there to be an agreement that goes both ways? What has the denomination committed to do in a document that helps it to witness to its own faithful actions, not in the world, but to its own? In <em>Vision and Expectations<\/em>, the minister was expected to life a life of justice. The document reads:<\/p>\n<p><em>Justice<\/em><\/p>\n<blockquote><p>The church is to witness to God\u2019s call for justice in every aspect of life, including testimony against injustice and oppression, whether personal or systemic. This church expects its ordained ministers to be committed to justice in the life of the church, in society, and in the world. The ordained minister is expected to oppose all forms of harassment and assault.<a href=\"#_edn50\" name=\"_ednref50\">[50]<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>[35] What if the church\u2019s work was not just an outward expression, but also was responsible for condemning injustice within its own ranks?<a href=\"#_edn51\" name=\"_ednref51\">[51]<\/a> If it is still indeed the will of the \u201cpowers that be\u201d to create a document, we need one which speaks of two-way support, wherein the church would witness to God\u2019s call for justice in the life of its ministers, and would use its resources to curb injustice both within and without. As it currently stands, the denomination is itself a system that consumes minister\u2019s gifts but does not often offer its ministers the same justice that it demands. This may sound harsh, because the pastor <em>is<\/em> most often getting paid a wage, but because of the way that the ELCA polity functions, the pastor is usually paid by the <em>church, <\/em>not the denomination.<\/p>\n<p>[36] Karl Marx asks why someone works for wages in the first place: \u201cWhy does he (sic) sell it? To live. But the exercise of labour power, labour, is the worker\u2019s own life-activity, the manifestation of his own life. And this <em>life-activity <\/em>he sells to another person to secure the necessary <em>means<\/em> of <em>subsistence. <\/em>Thus, his life-activity is for him only a means to enable him to exist.<a href=\"#_edn52\" name=\"_ednref52\">[52]<\/a> In the case of the ELCA minister, they are selling their life activity, certainly, but beyond subsistence, the ELCA speaks of the minister working in response to a call from <em>God,<\/em> and to that end, the institution should fight against the structural injustice that the minister must bear to realize their vocation. The denomination should make provisions to create a two-way covenant, or else, the system in which the minister works is just another corporate institution.<\/p>\n<p>[37] As it currently stands, the denominational institution functions with the gifts of the pastor, but the only real responsibility it has is providing a place where pastors can buy insurance, and a repository for the storing of pensions, and <em>each<\/em> of these is contingent upon whether the pastor can afford it. If this is not a one-way relationship, I am not certain what would fit such a definition. In short, the message to the minister is \u201cfollow our rules, and you <em>may<\/em> be able to work for us.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>[38] In addition to a general theological outlook that acknowledges that we are all indebted before Christ, there also needs to be a covenantal relationship that is more than transactional. The Parable of the lost son depicts this clearly, specifically at the point when the younger son finds himself employed by the stranger in the far country.<a href=\"#_edn53\" name=\"_ednref53\">[53]<\/a> The son is receiving a wage from the hired hand, but his being in foreign territory with zero connections has rendered him destitute. In just <em>that<\/em> moment in the text, there is a famine, some disaster that breaks the integrity of the system, and the younger son, though he is actively working and earning a wage, is not satiated. We do not know for certain, but maybe the stranger\u2019s connectedness in the far country allowed him to survive <em>and <\/em>continue paying the younger son amid a broken system. What would it have looked like if the relationship between the younger son and the stranger were more than corporate or transactional? Perhaps the younger son would have been better taken care of if the relationship were different. Both the stranger <em>and <\/em>the son benefit from a covenantal relationship, because the younger son can continue to serve in the stranger\u2019s institution (farm) and be <em>well.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>[39] Howard Thurman in his work <em>Jesus and the Disinherited <\/em>speaks about a radical relationship between a marginalized person and a person of power.<a href=\"#_edn54\" name=\"_ednref54\">[54]<\/a> In this rebalancing of power, the powerful person must see the <em>worth <\/em>in engaging the marginalized person, and the marginalized person must see the value in forgiving the person in power, who has often been responsible for their own pain. In that same way, the dominant culture must see the value in a renegotiated relationship, and the marginalized culture must extend enough forgiveness so that an invitation to dialogue <em>together<\/em> can begin. This is a challenging task, but a worthy one.<\/p>\n<p>[40] Ministers are struggling to make ends meet in the broken system. Student debt is skyrocketing, and they are working in a system that seems full of strangers, in that, the people who are writing documents are in secluded spaces where there is not a multiplicity of voices, and while the ministers secretly struggle with the debt that they have accrued to fulfill a call, they are doubly injured when their integrity is questioned with a document that claims to have no authority in the first place. The stranger is indebted to the son for working, and the son is indebted to the stranger for providing shelter, and in the meantime, <em>both <\/em>are indebted to God.<\/p>\n<p>[41] It is quite understandable that there should be an educational system that supports upward mobility through education, but this is proving not to be the case. This Western system of education and the taking on of debt ultimately becomes a problem in the theological world, notably in the ELCA: the task group asked to work on the <em>Vision and Expectations <\/em>document came up with a <em>practical<\/em> set of virtues including fiscal responsibility, which also unofficially is used for justification when the topic of student indebtedness arises. This denominational group made decisions about the norms that should govern its ministers based upon their own theology and worldview, presupposing that <em>their<\/em> worldview was the <em>only <\/em>worldview and way of being in the world. To date, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America is, according to a Pew Research Report, the whitest denomination in America.<a href=\"#_edn55\" name=\"_ednref55\">[55]<\/a> To this end, their theology and worldview was almost certainly centered in whiteness and Eurocentrism, and when put into <em>practice<\/em>, the ELCA created a document with all the trappings of what Tom Beaudoin and Katherine Turpin call \u201cWhite Practical Theology.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn56\" name=\"_ednref56\">[56]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[42] Beaudoin and Turpin outline the key features of White Practical Theology as follows: firstly, they focus on the individual.<a href=\"#_edn57\" name=\"_ednref57\">[57]<\/a> \u201cAttention to the rights owed to, the virtues developed by, and the property owned by individuals stand at the center of white culture.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn58\" name=\"_ednref58\">[58]<\/a> Secondly, White Practical Theology has an inherent belief in progress: \u201cthe future lies within the mastery of those near the center of the social-ecclesial structure, a congenital confidence in progress toward an imagined end-state that surpasses our current reality.<a href=\"#_edn59\" name=\"_ednref59\">[59]<\/a> Thirdly, White Practical Theology has all of the markers of white supremacy, which creates a strong visceral reaction, because it is associated with hate groups. But its appearance is much more subtle than this: \u201cmore common is a low-key \u201cpreference\u201d given to white cultural norms as morally, organizationally, and aesthetically superior.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn60\" name=\"_ednref60\">[60]<\/a> The field of Practical Theology was governed and normed by \u201clargely white, middle-class, mainline Protestant, historically male-governed, and more or less connected to European ecclesial-theological heritages,\u201d<a href=\"#_edn61\" name=\"_ednref61\">[61]<\/a> and naturally, their own worldviews would prevail in legislating policy, or writing Practical Theology for respective denominations. Fourth, White Practical Theology touts orderliness and procedural clarity: \u201cwhite Europeans and their cultural descendants share a long cultural history or organizing procedurally, often in order to increase efficiency and convenience\u2026[a]s an expression of cultural privilege of whites and an inherited proprietary disposition toward setting the terms of the field, one would expect a white discipline to be preoccupied with questions of method, indeed of defining <em>the<\/em> method that would \u201cgovern\u201d the whole field, and that then would be assumed to be \u201capplied\u201d (with local variations, of course) to local or indigenous communities.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn62\" name=\"_ednref62\">[62]<\/a> Lastly, White Practical Theology establishes a meritocracy and belief in the system, such that \u201cfair institutions will give any person who works hard and perseveres due credit award virtuous behavior.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn63\" name=\"_ednref63\">[63]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[43] White Practical Theology\u2019s fingerprints could be seen all over <em>Vision and Expectations<\/em>, in that it privileges the formation of its virtues as created by white people, believing that faithful living will bring about the progression of Christ\u2019s advent into the world. In addition, the document\u2019s being crafted in the ELCA, by <em>nature<\/em> of the ELCA\u2019s makeup, suggests that it was formed within the boundaries of whiteness. This formation is prominent, particularly regarding procedure and convenience: even amidst protest, <em>Vision and Expectations <\/em>was thought to be the best model for everyone. Moreover, the comment made in the 1990 meeting that some of the people who are coming in may not be trained like Lutherans, further creates a chasm of us vs. them, which is an ugly dichotomy that has undertones that undergird the historical structural inequity in American society. As an ordained minority Lutheran minister who has not received \u201cLutheran training,\u201d I cannot help but to think that George Forell was referring to me, or someone <em>like <\/em>me.<a href=\"#_edn64\" name=\"_ednref64\">[64]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[44] The framers of the document believed that what they were prescribing would not be difficult to uphold, so long as people just did what they were supposed to do. Unfortunately, however, the educational system had left many without reward.<\/p>\n<p>[45] The problem ultimately is how White Practical Theology forms its norms. It (arrogantly) makes general theological claims about humanity that ends up not really being fully inclusive, makes objective claims that are taken for granted, and claims contextuality, but is much too broad to really take context seriously.<a href=\"#_edn65\" name=\"_ednref65\">[65]<\/a> It is in <em>this <\/em>context that <em>Vision and Expectations <\/em>was born, and in <em>defiance <\/em>of this context that it needed to be resisted.<\/p>\n<p>[46] The argument can be made that none of this matters, because <em>Vision and Expectations <\/em>is gone, but the <em>larger<\/em> issue deals with <em>process. <\/em>The question should <em>always <\/em>be, <em>who <\/em>is in the room making these decisions? Who is <em>not<\/em> in the room, and what are the <em>norms<\/em> that govern and frame our decision making? What blind spots have we run into in the past, and are we a Church who doubles down when its minority voices speak up, or do we ignore protests and push through legislation from the top-downward? The future is in somebody\u2019s hands, but the ELCA needs to make sure that the future is in the <em>right <\/em>hands.<\/p>\n<p>[47] Future work around this project certainly includes the clarification of the relationship between the denomination and its ministers, what \u201ccalling\u201d and \u201cvocation\u201d mean to both the institution and its members, what that entails for their working relationship together (or separately), and what justice looks like both within and without. There are already conversations happening about funding sources and programs that are either trying to get in front of the debt crisis or seeking to alleviate injury done to the financial plight of either pastors or seminarians.<a href=\"#_edn66\" name=\"_ednref66\">[66]<\/a> The ELCA can find ways to appropriate resources to its own ministers, proving that it is willing to broaden its relationship with and to its ministers.<\/p>\n<p>[48] Limitations of this study are that it may be quite narrow, as it only really focuses on the ELCA, although I employ The Episcopal Church as one of the other conversation partners. There needs to be more up-to-date data on student indebtedness: the most recent information is four years old. In addition, the old paradigms and structures may be too ingrained for the suggestions of re-appropriation of resources to work.<\/p>\n<p>[49] This project illustrates how I have come to understand my work as a Practical Theologian. I am a Black man who is an ordained Minister of Word and Sacrament in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, and my experience stands directly in contradistinction with and to the general worldview and reality that the <em>Vision and Expectations <\/em>document prescribed, and to that end my own experience nullifies the experience of the dominant culture. My struggles with student debt do not just end with me but <em>inform<\/em> and point towards the experience of countless others. This work has been done methodologically using a \u201ccommunity autoethnographic approach,\u201d<a href=\"#_edn67\" name=\"_ednref67\">[67]<\/a> with some slight modifications.<\/p>\n<p>[50] Autoethnography \u201cis an approach to research and writing that seeks to describe and systematically analyze <em>(graphy) <\/em>personal experience <em>(auto)<\/em> to understand cultural experience <em>(ethno).\u201d<a href=\"#_edn68\" name=\"_ednref68\"><strong>[68]<\/strong><\/a> <\/em>Research becomes an act concerned with social consciousness and is carried out using both autobiography and ethnography.<a href=\"#_edn69\" name=\"_ednref69\">[69]<\/a> Thus, autoethnography is both a \u201cprocess and product.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn70\" name=\"_ednref70\">[70]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[51]The rise of postmodernism in the 1980s \u201cintroduced new and abundant opportunities to reform social science and reconceive the objectives and forms of social science inquiry.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn71\" name=\"_ednref71\">[71]<\/a> Social science was increasingly limited in terms of its \u201contological, epistemological, and axiological\u201d claims,<a href=\"#_edn72\" name=\"_ednref72\">[72]<\/a> and scholars began uncovering ways in which so-called \u201ctruths\u201d could only be as reliable as the vocabularies and paradigms in which they had been formed.<a href=\"#_edn73\" name=\"_ednref73\">[73]<\/a> There was no longer any need for general, universal narrative, and furthermore, the individual stories of people revealed interesting new relationship that could create phenomena which had the ability to teach \u201cmorals and ethics, [could introduce] unique ways of thinking and feeling, and [could help] people make sense of themselves and others.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn74\" name=\"_ednref74\">[74]<\/a> Scholars, then, began to move the social sciences away from science \u201cproper,\u201d toward more of a literary sensibility, <em>centering<\/em> value, rather than pretending to have no values at all:<a href=\"#_edn75\" name=\"_ednref75\">[75]<\/a><\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Many of these scholars turned to autoethnography because they were seeking a positive response to critiques of canonical ideas about what research is and how research should be done. In particular, they wanted to concentrate on ways of producing meaningful, accessible, and evocative research grounded in personal experience, research that would sensitize readers to issues of identity politic, to experiences shrouded in silence, and to forms of representation that deepen our capacity to empathize with people who are different from us&#8230;Furthermore, scholars began recognizing that different kinds of people possess different assumptions about the world\u2014a multitude of ways of speaking, writing, valuing and believing\u2014and that conventional ways of doing and thinking about research were narrow, limiting, and parochial. These differences can stem from race, gender, sexuality, age, ability, class, education, or religion. For the most part, those who advocate and insist on canonical forms of doing and writing research are advocating a White, masculine, heterosexual, middle\/upper-classed, Christian, able-bodied perspective. Following these convictions, a researcher not only disregards other ways of knowing but also implies that other ways necessarily are unsatisfactory and invalid.<a href=\"#_edn76\" name=\"_ednref76\">[76]<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>[52] Autoethnography eschews rigid definitions of research and opens a wider understanding of what it means to be in the world,<a href=\"#_edn77\" name=\"_ednref77\">[77]<\/a> and though <em>Vision and Expectations<\/em> does not center on research per se, it was still crafted within the bastions of the previously-held universal paradigm, which renders it unhelpful to the non-majority groups listed above at best, or is insidious, at worst. Autoethnographic methodology brings in narrative and story that shrinks the too-general context that White Practical Theology claims to have, while also assigning new values and problematizing produced works, such as <em>Vision and Expectations. <\/em>In short, it puts real-life bodies into the narrative that do not fit the narrative that the research (or document in this case) posits.<\/p>\n<p>[53] There are many different forms of autoethnographic research, but the one that I have employed is called a \u201ccommunity autoethnography.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn78\" name=\"_ednref78\">[78]<\/a> Community autoethnographies \u201cuse the personal experience of researchers-in-collaboration to illustrate how a community manifests particular social\/cultural issues. Community autoethnographies thus not only facilitate \u2018community-building\u2019 research practices but also make opportunities for \u2018cultural and social intervention\u2019 possible.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn79\" name=\"_ednref79\">[79]<\/a> While my research was not undertaken <em>along <\/em>with other researchers, it <em>was<\/em> undertaken using other research work in <em>addition<\/em> to my personal narrative. The reason that it was important to use other research was because it makes sense that I would be interested in a problem that involved my own experience, but it did not seem right or fair to examine a problem with which only <em>I<\/em> was dealing. Thus, the narrative that I shared about myself was buttressed with other research to form a more communal outlook, which is a much more convincing argument to make toward change. If this indebtedness problem were only <em>my <\/em>narrative, it would be considered a \u201cpersonal problem.\u201d But as it is a nationwide issue, my experience provides a window-view into a much deeper issue.<\/p>\n<p>[54] James Cone points towards this kind of work in <em>The Cross and the Lynching Tree.<a href=\"#_edn80\" name=\"_ednref80\"><strong>[80]<\/strong><\/a> <\/em>Using his own experience, Cone excoriates white, liberal theology\u2019s failure (embodied in Reinhold Niebuhr) to take the suffering of black people into account. After beautifully laying out Niebuhrian theology, citing his \u201ctransvaluation of values\u201d as one of the central tenets of Niebuhr\u2019s Christian realism, Cone excoriates Niebuhr <em>on the same grounds <\/em>on which his theology is built: for Cone, Niebuhr\u2019s \u201cChristian Realism\u201d had failed if it could not see the blight of the black experience before him.<a href=\"#_edn81\" name=\"_ednref81\">[81]<\/a>\u00a0 Cone criticizes Niebuhr for his ambivalence in dealing with issues of racism in America, as well as his unwillingness to call out the evils of lynching.<a href=\"#_edn82\" name=\"_ednref82\">[82]<\/a> Ultimately, Cone is also disappointed that for all his theological sophistication, Niebuhr fails to see the connection between the cross of Christ and the lynching of blacks.<a href=\"#_edn83\" name=\"_ednref83\">[83]<\/a> Cone even goes further to argue that Martin Luther King\u2019s railing against gradualism was a direct result of Niebuhr\u2019s unwillingness to act or speak.<a href=\"#_edn84\" name=\"_ednref84\">[84]<\/a> Cone suggests that Niebuhr cannot locate these critical issues, because he is limited by his own context.<a href=\"#_edn85\" name=\"_ednref85\">[85]<\/a> Cone does indeed include personal narrative in his work, but his story also points to the plight of others who have experienced the same pain that he has, and is buttressed by evidence and sourcing from other Black \u201cresearchers.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>[55] Howard Thurman takes the same approach. In <em>Jesus and the Disinherited,<a href=\"#_edn86\" name=\"_ednref86\"><strong>[86]<\/strong><\/a> <\/em>Thurman seeks to answer the question as to whether Christianity was of any benefit to people with their \u201cbacks against the wall.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn87\" name=\"_ednref87\">[87]<\/a> He has <em>some<\/em> personal experience, but his experience as a Black man in America points to a much larger phenomenon.<\/p>\n<p>[56] Autoethnographic research is not without its limitations. As part ethnography, it is often dismissed for not being rigorous enough, or that it is devoid of theory.<a href=\"#_edn88\" name=\"_ednref88\">[88]<\/a> It has also been described as too emotional, aesthetic, or therapeutic.<a href=\"#_edn89\" name=\"_ednref89\">[89]<\/a> It is also accused of being done by \u201cnavel-gazers [and] self-absorbed narcissists who don\u2019t fulfill scholarly obligations of hypothesizing, analyzing, and theorizing.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn90\" name=\"_ednref90\">[90]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[57] As part autobiography, \u201cautoethnography is dismissed for autobiographical writing standards, as being insufficiently aesthetic and literary and not artful enough.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn91\" name=\"_ednref91\">[91]<\/a> Furthermore, autobiographers accuse autoethnography of disregarding the imagination needed to be artists, while instead trying to cater to social and scientific sensibilities.<a href=\"#_edn92\" name=\"_ednref92\">[92]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[58] Autoethnography is rejected both by the science which undergirds ethnography and the art which undergirds autobiography. To this, however, the authors suggest that art and science are not at odds with each other, and that autoethnography disrupts the boundaries between the two: \u201cAutoethnographers believe research can be rigorous, theoretical, and analytical <em>and <\/em>emotional, therapeutic and inclusive of personal and social phenomena. Autoethnographers also value the need to write and represent research in evocative, aesthetic ways.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn93\" name=\"_ednref93\">[93]<\/a> Furthermore, Authoethnographers feel that it is a waste of time to debate methodologies, but are instead interested in the <em>telos, <\/em>or goal of their research, which, they admit, is probably different from that of their science-only or art-only peers.<a href=\"#_edn94\" name=\"_ednref94\">[94]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[59] This is where I have arrived for this project, but it is still missing something. I believe that as a practical <em>theologian<\/em> that personal, or even social experience and science is not enough. The research must be supported with a theological component of some sort.<\/p>\n<p>[60] If I had to identify myself on the spectrum of practical theology <em>today<\/em>, I would most resonate with the Revised Correlational Method. Don Browning and David Tracy, who sought to create a mutual dialogue between theology and the arts and sciences, developed this method. Questions of inquiry can come from either theology or the arts and sciences, and the answers to said questions can come from either theology <em>or <\/em>the arts and sciences, since they are considered in this model to be equal sources of knowledge.<a href=\"#_edn95\" name=\"_ednref95\">[95]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[61] Some practical theologians have decried the Revised Correlational Approach because it gives too much weight to human experience,<a href=\"#_edn96\" name=\"_ednref96\">[96]<\/a> but I argue that human experience envelops <em>all<\/em> the human being, including <em>what <\/em>they know and <em>how<\/em> they know it,<a href=\"#_edn97\" name=\"_ednref97\">[97]<\/a> and this includes knowledge of God, or theology, which is (purported to be shaped by) revelation. How does theology shape the imagination? Theology should <em>undergird<\/em> imagination, while sourcing real life experience and material. I do not believe that theology exists in a vacuum, but that it is mediated through the sieve of human experience and knowing. How else can humans perceive God, except through their own limited experience? To this end, it stands to reason that no theologian can do theology <em>outside<\/em> of human experience, so that any perceived revelation of Jesus Christ is always limited and bounded by human frailty.<\/p>\n<p>[62] We are in bondage to both sin <em>and <\/em>our human ways of perceiving revelation, even as we attempt to apprehend God. Paul said, we see through a glass darkly (or, <em>in a riddle<\/em><a href=\"#_edn98\" name=\"_ednref98\">[98]<\/a>), but one day we will see face to face.<a href=\"#_edn99\" name=\"_ednref99\">[99]<\/a> The \u201cone day\u201d has yet to come, and so we grasp for God with the tools that we have been given, which is why, as society changes, theology and revelation seem to change with it. It is so interesting, for instance, how the revelation of freedom has expanded over the last 150 years to include black bodies. There are other countless examples that suggest that theology and lived social experience reflexively inform each other. Furthermore, who is to say that social science and on-the-ground reality is <em>not, <\/em>in fact, revelation of God in new ways? Can we not suggest social science and theology can have equal weight and be in conversation with each other because <em>all <\/em>knowledge can serve the telos of knowing God?<\/p>\n<p>[63] This is why there <em>is <\/em>a \u201cBlack Theology\u201d or a \u201cWhite Theology\u201d in the first place, because someone\u2019s <em>lived<\/em> experience did not line up with someone <em>else\u2019s <\/em>revelation of God. Context matters, even in thinking about revelation. Revelation and resulting theology that is limited to only one group of people, cannot ultimately be liberative. Steven Bevans suggests, \u201cThere is no theology, only contextual theology.\u201d<a href=\"#_edn100\" name=\"_ednref100\">[100]<\/a> Theology must always be undertaken with context in mind. In this way, the theologian and people in the theological enterprise can be certain that their perspectives are included in the theology. Instead of a \u201ctop down\u201d theological approach, this approach offers the ability for the practitioners to remain relevant in their specific contextual realities. In the place of a \u201cuniversal\u201d theology, however, how can contextual theologies seek to create a unity outside of themselves? Perhaps this is not even an aim. Maybe the only aim is to address the ills that a certain group of people are experiencing, and I am the first to admit that this is a worthy enterprise, <em>but<\/em> what is lost in the contextual silo? As context is the fodder for actual contextual theology, one can see that if a person\u2019s context is limited in scope and imagination, so also will resultant theology and practice in the world be limited as well.<\/p>\n<p>[64] Homiletician John McClure talks about this in part. Using Emanuel Levin\u00e1s\u2019 work, McClure talks about seeing the \u201cglory of the infinite\u201d through relationship to the Other. This relationship to the other, however, requires the self-erasure of the dominant being\u2019s boundaries of self, to engage the Other.<a href=\"#_edn101\" name=\"_ednref101\">[101]<\/a> So long as the individual\u2019s boundaries remain closed, they remain an insulated contextual being. For dominant (white) theology to learn from contextual theologies, there must be the willingness for boundaries of whiteness to be fluid, so that there may be some integration (within itself) of contextual material. Universality (or even the <em>guise<\/em> of such) is pretty much out of the window with the abolishing of an \u201cobjective\u201d theology. With the growing consensus that marginalized people are no longer responsible for teaching the dominant culture, the dominant culture and its theology must be willing to self-erase its boundaries toward inclusion. It must be said, however, that there are some contextual realities and theologies that would not <em>wish<\/em> to be broken into by dominant culture because of past abuses, etc. Maybe the answer is that it is better to have <em>theologies<\/em> for all (as is currently the case)<em>, <\/em>rather than <em>a <\/em>theology for <em>some, <\/em>with the reality that some will pass like \u201cships in the night,\u201d never meeting. <em>If <\/em>all goes well for the individual who seeks to expand their contextual realities to include the marginalized, it would only be so because they <em>desire <\/em>to do so, and are <em>invited <\/em>to do so.<\/p>\n<p>[65] Revelation is what shapes theology. To this end, we must be careful of setting up categories of \u201cpure\u201d revelation, or generalizing markers of what it means to \u201cknow\u201d God, because without paying attention to contextual and social realities, we run the risk of making the same mistake that the <em>Vision and Expectation<\/em> document made: creating a \u201cuniversal\u201d way of being, citing \u201crevelation,\u201d which in turn, ultimately <em>limits <\/em>people from <em>being <\/em>in and with Christ. In short, I affirm Bevans\u2019 assertion that there is only contextual theology, but would push the boundaries to also say; there is no revelation, only <em>contextual revelation<\/em>. Contextual science and contextual revelation come together in a Revised Correlational Approach to know God.<\/p>\n<p>[66] Pete Ward is clear that a theologian is supposed to place themselves into whatever they are studying.<a href=\"#_edn102\" name=\"_ednref102\">[102]<\/a> He says:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Whatever the specific issue and whatever your chose method, it is important to spend some time thinking about yourself. Think through how you have been shaped and formed as part of the Christian church. Try to identify how specific experiences of theological perspectives that you carry with you might help to shape or indeed pull out of shape your attempt at theological reflection. If this is a piece of writing, then putting yourself into the study in specific ways may not simply be desirable\u2014it might be essential. After all, this study must matter to you or be of importance to you for some reason. Naming this is a fundamental part of theological reflection.<a href=\"#_edn103\" name=\"_ednref103\">[103]<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>I think that as I do work in the future, I will hope not to always come into the study as one of the marginalized victims, though this is the real possibility of what it means to be a practical theologian who is always a minority in some way. Community Autoethnography was how I was able to study <em>Vision and Expectations, <\/em>but I do not think that all my studies will use the autoethnographic methodological approach, or even a community autoethnographic revised correlational approach, because, at some point, I hope I also have gifts not just for the indebted or Black church, but also for the larger Church. There are issues that traverse lines and boundaries in the Church that certainly may have contextual nuance but are widely experienced. How, then, would I not just be creating a universal Practical theology, which is the same accusation levied at those who traffic in White Practical Theology? The answer is <em>embodiment. <\/em>I am, admittedly, being trained with the tools of White (Practical) theology, but my embodied self comes to different conclusions than the ones who formed the tools and the structure.<\/p>\n<p>[67] James Cone speaks of his own education and reformation:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>I had to do something\u2026[t]heology was my trade\u2014all I had to show for nearly thirty years of living. I had a Ph.D. in systematic theology, but I didn\u2019t know how to use it in the fight for justice since nothing I\u2019d read spoke about what black people were going through. I had no models to follow. The few Negroes who had studied theology imitated white theologians, as I\u2019d done, while writing a doctoral dissertation on the Swiss theologian Karl Barth. The Detroit rebellion deeply troubled me and revolutionized my way of thinking. I could no longer write the same way, following the lead of Europeans and white Americans. I had to find a <em>new<\/em> way of talking about God that was accountable to black people and their fight for justice. I was the only Negro professor at a white college in a Midwestern city of about 25,000 people, which included, as far as I could tell, no more than fifty Negroes, including me.<a href=\"#_edn104\" name=\"_ednref104\">[104]<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Over time, Cone had a renaissance, learning to reconcile his own need to be able to create a theological expression that included black people\u2019s problems, but used the <em>tools<\/em> of his formation to express himself anew:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>When I started to trust my experience, I began with verve and self-confidence to write my first essay, \u201cChristianity and Black Power\u201d (1968). \u201cIf the gospel is the liberation for the oppressed,\u201d I wrote, \u201cthen Jesus is where the oppressed are\u2014proclaiming release to the captives.\u201d I also emphasized the prophets\u2019 call for justice, which prefigured Jesus\u2019s solidarity with the poor. I quoted sixteenth-century reformer Martin Luther, Swiss theologian Karl Barth, and French existentialist philosopher Albert Camus to show that I was academically informed in theology and philosophy. I made them say what I wanted to say, even though I knew that they probably would reject the blackness I saw in the gospel of Jesus.<a href=\"#_edn105\" name=\"_ednref105\">[105]<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>[68] Cone\u2019s <em>embodied <\/em>being allowed him to use the tools differently. By virtue of his <em>embodied<\/em> <em>self <\/em>being in direct contradistinction to the tools that he used to do theology, perhaps his work is <em>always <\/em>autoethnographic in nature. Despite my hopes, then, that all my work will not be community autoethnographic, I realize more and more that this may not be the case. \u00a0At the very least, however, it should always be <em>theological, <\/em>in that it takes seriously claims about God and how we understand our call to live in light of (contextual) revelation;<em> contextual, <\/em>in that theological enterprise should also seek to understand the time and place in which its subjects live, and that times, places, and expressions differ across locales;<em> and communal <\/em>in nature, in that it is always a <em>dialogical<\/em> enterprise between <em>all<\/em> who engage (or will be engaged by) the theological enterprise. Theology and science are never to be done in a vacuum, but in a covenantal community.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong>\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Appendix A<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>\u00a0<\/strong><em>This is the letter that I submitted to my Synodical Bishop after I was \u201cflagged for indebtedness.\u201d <\/em>It was shared with many of the \u201chigher ups\u201d at the denominational headquarters.<\/p>\n<p>Bishop X<a href=\"#_edn106\" name=\"_ednref106\">[106]<\/a>,<\/p>\n<p>I hope this letter finds you well. Today I met with you and Q<a href=\"#_edn107\" name=\"_ednref107\">[107]<\/a>, Vice President of the Synod. One of the topics that came up in our conversation was a background check conducted by the ELCA that had \u201cflagged\u201d my \u201cindebtedness.\u201d In that moment, I felt laid bare and ashamed\u2014and a little piqued that <em>once again<\/em>, in some small way, I needed to vouch for my fitness as a pastor in the Synod. Though this was not at all the spirit in which my indebtedness came up (it came up as a point of concern for my wellbeing), this line of inquiry, in my opinion, points to a larger issue that should be addressed on the institutional level.<\/p>\n<p>As of 2019, over 44.7 million people owe 1.5 trillion dollars in student loan debt<a href=\"#_edn108\" name=\"_ednref108\">[108]<\/a>, and I am one of those people. When I went to college, I was under the impression (as were many of my generation) that the poor could upwardly progress through education. To this end, I achieved, and worked hard. Despite stellar grades and academic performance, I still had to accrue quite a bit of student debt with the hopes that I would get good gainful employment. I knew that I wanted to be challenged academically, so I chose one of the most prestigious divinity schools in the country and attended. Without denominational support, local church support, or access to other similar grants, my student loan debt skyrocketed. With this taking on of debt, I prayed that God would make it possible for me to be able to reasonably live, support my family, and pay my loan payment each month.<\/p>\n<p>As Providence would have it, I graduated from seminary and was able to land some excellent jobs: I worked as the Director of Family Ministry at Christ Lutheran Churches-Charlotte; as the Associate Minister of Youth and Young Adults at The Riverside Church in the City of New York; and have served as the Pastor and Mission Developer at The Christ Center at Transfiguration in Harlem, NY. I have been able to make my loan payments on time, while also living reasonably. I served in my previous posts with honor and great accomplishment\u2014all while indebted to the federal government for my student loans, and also after also having passed multi-layered background checks without being flagged.<\/p>\n<p>The inquiry from the ELCA points to a larger issue. When we take calls as Lutheran pastors, we are expected to be good stewards of our financial resources. And it makes good sense that if pastors will have oversight of the resources of churches and other ministries that they should be able to demonstrate their ability to care for themselves and their personal responsibilities. At first glance, this seems to protect the institution from people who are in some desperate financial straits.<\/p>\n<p>The issue arises with the reality that the mandate that pastors have little to no indebtedness privileges people who either: have denominational support to attend seminary; attend a seminary that seeks to provide means of support for students (I am especially thinking of ELCA seminaries); have not come into the denomination as an \u201coutsider;\u201d and are not ministers of color (because we know that people of color overwhelmingly graduate with more student loan debt, face longer wait times for calls, and the calls that they get are in places with overwhelmingly scant resources\u2014and this affects women of color in our denomination more than any other group<a href=\"#_edn109\" name=\"_ednref109\">[109]<\/a>).<\/p>\n<p>Certainly, people make mistakes financially, and may not be fit to oversee the resources of others. That is fair and just. But what is unfair and unjust is lumping everyone into a category and simply calling it \u201cindebtedness.\u201d The unseen reality is that black and brown clergy have to \u201cpay to play\u201d to get into seminaries, then after getting subpar calls, they cannot afford to maintain their lives because they are helplessly participating in a circuitous capitalistic system that does not serve their interests. We can talk about the wonder of diversity in our churches all day, but we must reckon with the reality that for many, including me, my black body serving in an ELCA church came at a cost. This does not, however, make me any less qualified to do my work\u2014and to illustrate this, I can point to my great work in my pastorate in Harlem: we grew in numbers, we grew in faith, and we (against all odds) were able to steward what resources we had to show Christ to our community. I wonder how the great work would have been stifled in Harlem if the people there would have been made to wait <em>additional<\/em> time for a pastor because I was \u201cflagged for indebtedness.\u201d As Providence would have it, the whole process had been bungled, and the background check was not completed until after I had been already working and cultivating the community for almost a year and a half, and so, like everywhere else I have been, God was present, creating anew.<a href=\"#_edn110\" name=\"_ednref110\">[110]<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Instead of measuring my fitness or being concerned for my \u201cwellbeing,\u201d I hope that this letter will begin a much-needed conversation on a larger level. Does a person\u2019s (especially one who is a minority) \u201cindebtedness\u201d and inability to access the resources of their white peers make them unfit for service? While I appreciate the question of \u201care you okay,\u201d I would like to make it clear that as a black man in America, I have well become used to surviving in stifling systems, and I come from people who have done the same. It is nice when I am asked, \u201cHow are you able to do it?\u201d \u201cYou owe a lot of money, are you okay?\u201d But the shadow side to those questions is directly related to my fitness. If we are going to use indebtedness (especially from educational expenses) to disqualify people, or at the least, raise questions, then as the statistics show, our churches, which are already suffering from a clergy shortage, will suffer all the more. Using the brokenness of the educational system, which i<em>tself <\/em>is driven by capitalistic aims, to question the <em>abilities<\/em> and <em>fitness<\/em> of people of color, is alarming and needs prayerful adjustment. I understand that when a background check comes back as flagged for indebtedness, it will not say \u201cstudent loans.\u201d But those flags will continue to increase over time, and we need to alter our stance on financial stewardship based upon the reality that different people have had very different experiences as it relates to educational pursuit and the incurring of debt. In short, we as a church should be looking for ways to dismantle the <em>system<\/em>, not disqualify the servant.<\/p>\n<p>Who is worthy to untie the sandals of Christ? The one with the least amount of student loan debt? I think not. The people worthy to proclaim and serve should be those washed, claimed, and called\u2014those with clean hands and pure hearts\u2014<em>we <\/em>unlikely and unqualified people who have been called according to God\u2019s purpose. I hope my feelings of shame and frustration can serve a greater purpose to help those who will be coming behind me in service to Christ.<\/p>\n<p>I write and submit this humbly.<\/p>\n<p>In God\u2019s Peace,<\/p>\n<p>The Rev. Kevin Vandiver<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><em>\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref1\" name=\"_edn1\">[1]<\/a> See Appendix A.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref2\" name=\"_edn2\">[2]<\/a> <em>Nitro. <\/em>\u201cStudent Loan Debt: A Current Picture of Student Borrowing and Repayment in the United States.\u201d 2019. Accessed 6\/25\/2019. Web. https:\/\/www.nitrocollege.com\/research\/average-student-loan-debt<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref3\" name=\"_edn3\">[3]<\/a> Evangelical Lutheran Church Council Meeting Minutes, October 1990. https:\/\/download.elca.org\/ELCA%20Resource%20Repository\/ELCA_Church_Council_Minutes_1990.pdf. Accessed 12\/16\/2019.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref4\" name=\"_edn4\">[4]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref5\" name=\"_edn5\">[5]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref6\" name=\"_edn6\">[6]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref7\" name=\"_edn7\">[7]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref8\" name=\"_edn8\">[8]<\/a> \u201cVE_Doc_History_Flowchart\u201d Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. https:\/\/download.elca.org\/ELCA%20Resource%20Repository\/VE_Doc_History_flow_chart.pdf. Accessed 12\/16\/2019.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref9\" name=\"_edn9\">[9]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref10\" name=\"_edn10\">[10]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref11\" name=\"_edn11\">[11]<\/a> Sharon L. Miller, Kim Maphis Early, Anthony T. Ruger. \u201cA Call to Action: Lifting the Burden: How Theological Schools can Help Students Manage Educational Debt.\u201d (Auburn Seminary, April 2014), 3.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref12\" name=\"_edn12\">[12]<\/a> Ibid, 3. Figure 1.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref13\" name=\"_edn13\">[13]<\/a> Ibid, 3. Figure 1.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref14\" name=\"_edn14\">[14]<\/a> Ibid, 4-5.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref15\" name=\"_edn15\">[15]<\/a> Ibid, 4-5.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref16\" name=\"_edn16\">[16]<\/a> Ibid, 4-5.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref17\" name=\"_edn17\">[17]<\/a> Ibid, 4-5.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref18\" name=\"_edn18\">[18]<\/a> Ibid, 4ff.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref19\" name=\"_edn19\">[19]<\/a> Episcopal News Service. \u201cHow to Solve the Seminarian Debt Crisis.\u201d <em>Episcopal Life Weekly. <\/em>(The Episcopal Church, 2009). https:\/\/episcopalchurch.org\/files\/elife_insert_092709_eng_bw_lettersize.pdf. Accessed 12\/13\/2019.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref20\" name=\"_edn20\">[20]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref21\" name=\"_edn21\">[21]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref22\" name=\"_edn22\">[22]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref23\" name=\"_edn23\">[23]<\/a> Joy McDonald Coltvet. \u201cSeminarian Debt: Ethical Challenges.\u201d <em>Journal of Lutheran Ethics. <\/em>(Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, 5\/1\/2012). https:\/\/www.elca.org\/JLE\/Articles\/149. Accessed 12\/15\/2019.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref24\" name=\"_edn24\">[24]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref25\" name=\"_edn25\">[25]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref26\" name=\"_edn26\">[26]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref27\" name=\"_edn27\">[27]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref28\" name=\"_edn28\">[28]<\/a> \u201cLet\u2019s Talk About Debt.\u201d (Evangelical Lutheran Church in America Research and Evaluation, 3\/25\/2015). http:\/\/download.elca.org\/ELCA%20Resource%20Repository\/Stewards_of_Abundance_Lets_Talk_About_Debt.pdf. Accessed 12\/15\/2019.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref29\" name=\"_edn29\">[29]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref30\" name=\"_edn30\">[30]<\/a> Aristotle, Robert C. Bartlett, and Susan Collins. <em>Aristotle\u2019s Nicomachean Ethics.<\/em> (Chicago London: University of Chicago Press, 2011).<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref31\" name=\"_edn31\">[31]<\/a> Ibid, 23.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref32\" name=\"_edn32\">[32]<\/a> Ibid, 1-14, 229-230.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref33\" name=\"_edn33\">[33]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref34\" name=\"_edn34\">[34]<\/a> <em>Vision and Expectations.<\/em> Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. http:\/\/download.elca.org\/ELCA%20Resource%20Repository\/Vision_and_Expectations_for_Ordained_Ministers.pdf. 1990. Accessed 12\/16\/2019, 2. Emphasis mine.\u00a0 Though the document was available in 2019, it is no longer available on the ELCA website. If you would like a copy, you can contact the ELCA Archives, https:\/\/www.elca.org\/archives.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref35\" name=\"_edn35\">[35]<\/a> Aristotle. <em>Aristotle\u2019s Nicomachean Ethics.<\/em> Translated and introduced by Robert C. Bartlett, and Susan Collins. (Chicago London: University of Chicago Press, 2011). 34ff.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref36\" name=\"_edn36\">[36]<\/a> See <em>Vision and Expectations.<\/em> Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, 1990, 11-2. Also, I realize that this does not overtly say \u201cindebtedness,\u201d but these were the grounds under which I was brought before the bishop.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref37\" name=\"_edn37\">[37]<\/a> Ibid, 12. Italics original to document.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref38\" name=\"_edn38\">[38]<\/a> Aristotle, 85.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref39\" name=\"_edn39\">[39]<\/a> Martha C. Nussbaum. <em>The Therapy of Desire.<\/em> (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2009), 54-6. See also Aristotle, Robert C. Bartlett, and Susan Collins. <em>Aristotle\u2019s Nicomachean Ethics.<\/em> (Chicago London: University of Chicago Press, 2011), 4-5, 223-235.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref40\" name=\"_edn40\">[40]<\/a> See Aristotle. <em>Nicomachean Ethics<\/em>.\u00a0 I. 8. 16. H. Rackham, trans.\u00a0 (London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1934).<\/p>\n<p>\u201cFor many noble actions require instruments for their performance, in the shape of friends or wealth or political power; . . . As we said therefore, happiness does seem to require the addition of external prosperity, and this is why some people identify it with good fortune.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref41\" name=\"_edn41\">[41]<\/a> The current edition of <em>Definitions and Guidelines<\/em> says the following about debt is: &#8220;7. Fiscal responsibilities:13 The following fiscal misconduct is considered conduct incompatible with the character of the ministerial office: a. Indifference to or avoidance of legitimate and neglected personal debts; b. Embezzlement of money or improper appropriation of the property of others; c. Using the ministerial office improperly for personal benefit or financial gain; d. Soliciting members or others to directly or indirectly acquire gifts, bequests, or similar benefits for personal gain\u201d http:\/\/download.elca.org\/ELCA%20Resource%20Repository\/Definitions_and_Guidelines_for_Discipline_2021.pdf.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref42\" name=\"_edn42\">[42]<\/a> Joy McDonald Coltvet. \u201cSeminarian Debt: Ethical Challenges.\u201d <em>Journal of Lutheran Ethics. <\/em>(Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, 5\/1\/2012). https:\/\/www.elca.org\/JLE\/Articles\/149. Accessed 12\/15\/2019.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref43\" name=\"_edn43\">[43]<\/a> See Mark 1:6-7.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref44\" name=\"_edn44\">[44]<\/a> Martin Luther. \u201cLectures on Galatians 3:5\u2014 \u201cThus Abraham Believed God\u201d in <em>Luther\u2019s Spirituality. <\/em>Philip D.W. Krey and Peter D.S. Krey, ed. (Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press, 2007).170.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref45\" name=\"_edn45\">[45]<\/a> Information about loan forbearance can be found here: https:\/\/studentaid.ed.gov\/sa\/repay-loans\/deferment-forbearance<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref46\" name=\"_edn46\">[46]<\/a> Psalm 24:3-6.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref47\" name=\"_edn47\">[47]<\/a> See Martin Luther. \u201cTo the Christian Nobility of the German Nation.\u201d 1520.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref48\" name=\"_edn48\">[48]<\/a> Joy McDonald Coltvet. \u201cSeminarian Debt: Ethical Challenges.\u201d <em>Journal of Lutheran Ethics. <\/em>(Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, 5\/1\/2012). https:\/\/www.elca.org\/JLE\/Articles\/149. Accessed 12\/15\/2019. Current link: Current link: <a href=\"https:\/\/learn.elca.org\/jle\/seminarian-debt-ethical-challenges\/\">https:\/\/learn.elca.org\/jle\/seminarian-debt-ethical-challenges\/<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref49\" name=\"_edn49\">[49]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref50\" name=\"_edn50\">[50]<\/a> <em>Vision and Expectations.<\/em> Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, 1990, 17.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref51\" name=\"_edn51\">[51]<\/a> There are certainly instances where the church looks inward to do its work, usually found in resolution documents, etc., but what I am calling for is a document that is almost a covenant between two entities.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref52\" name=\"_edn52\">[52]<\/a> Robert. C. Tucker. <em>The Marx-Engels Reader, <\/em>2<sup>nd<\/sup> ed. (New York: WW Norton &amp; Company, 1978, 1972), 204.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref53\" name=\"_edn53\">[53]<\/a> Luke 15:11-32 is the entire story, but this focuses on verses 12-14.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref54\" name=\"_edn54\">[54]<\/a> Howard Thurman. <em>Jesus and the Disinherited. <\/em>(Boston, MA: Beacon, 1979), 92-3.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref55\" name=\"_edn55\">[55]<\/a> Michael Lipka. \u201cThe Most and Least Racially Diverse U.S. Religious Groups.\u201d <em>Pew Research Center. <\/em>(2015). https:\/\/www.pewresearch.org\/fact-tank\/2015\/07\/27\/the-most-and-least-racially-diverse-u-s-religious-groups\/. Accessed 12\/15\/2019.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref56\" name=\"_edn56\">[56]<\/a> Tom Beaudoin and Katherine Turpin. \u201cWhite Practical Theology.\u201d <em>Opening the Field of Practical Theology: An Introduction. <\/em>Kathleen A. Cahalan and Gordon S. Mikoski, ed. (New York: Bowman &amp; Littlefield, 2014), 254-61.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref57\" name=\"_edn57\">[57]<\/a> Ibid, 255.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref58\" name=\"_edn58\">[58]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref59\" name=\"_edn59\">[59]<\/a> Ibid, 255-6.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref60\" name=\"_edn60\">[60]<\/a> Ibid, 257.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref61\" name=\"_edn61\">[61]<\/a> Ibid, 257-8<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref62\" name=\"_edn62\">[62]<\/a> Ibid, 258-9.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref63\" name=\"_edn63\">[63]<\/a> Ibid, 259.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref64\" name=\"_edn64\">[64]<\/a> See footnote 7 and corresponding text above.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref65\" name=\"_edn65\">[65]<\/a> Tom Beaudoin and Katherine Turpin. \u201cWhite Practical Theology.\u201d <em>Opening the Field of Practical Theology: An Introduction. <\/em>Kathleen A. Cahalan and Gordon S. Mikoski, ed. (New York: Bowman &amp; Littlefield, 2014), 261-3.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref66\" name=\"_edn66\">[66]<\/a> Joy McDonald Coltvet. \u201cSeminarian Debt: Ethical Challenges.\u201d <em>Journal of Lutheran Ethics. <\/em>(Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, 5\/1\/2012). https:\/\/www.elca.org\/JLE\/Articles\/149. Accessed 12\/15\/2019.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref67\" name=\"_edn67\">[67]<\/a> Carolyn Ellis, Tony E. Adams &amp; Arthur P. Bochner. \u201cAutoethnography: An Overview.\u201d <em>Forum: Qualitative Social Research (Sozialforschung). <\/em>Vol. 12, No.1, Art. 10 (2011), 7.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref68\" name=\"_edn68\">[68]<\/a> Ibid, 1.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref69\" name=\"_edn69\">[69]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref70\" name=\"_edn70\">[70]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref71\" name=\"_edn71\">[71]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref72\" name=\"_edn72\">[72]<\/a>Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref73\" name=\"_edn73\">[73]<\/a> Ibid, 2.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref74\" name=\"_edn74\">[74]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref75\" name=\"_edn75\">[75]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref76\" name=\"_edn76\">[76]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref77\" name=\"_edn77\">[77]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref78\" name=\"_edn78\">[78]<\/a> Ibid, 7.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref79\" name=\"_edn79\">[79]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref80\" name=\"_edn80\">[80]<\/a> James H. Cone. <em>The Cross and the Lynching Tree. <\/em>(Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 2011).<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref81\" name=\"_edn81\">[81]<\/a> Ibid, 34-5, 48<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref82\" name=\"_edn82\">[82]<\/a> Ibid, 30-64<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref83\" name=\"_edn83\">[83]<\/a> Ibid, 30ff<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref84\" name=\"_edn84\">[84]<\/a> Ibid, 39<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref85\" name=\"_edn85\">[85]<\/a> Ibid, 40<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref86\" name=\"_edn86\">[86]<\/a> Howard Thurman, <em>Jesus and the Disinherited. <\/em>(Boston: Beacon Press, 1976).<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref87\" name=\"_edn87\">[87]<\/a> Ibid, 1.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref88\" name=\"_edn88\">[88]<\/a> Carolyn Ellis, Tony E. Adams &amp; Arthur P. Bochner. \u201cAutoethnography: An Overview.\u201d <em>Forum: Qualitative Social Research (Sozialforschung). <\/em>Vol. 12, No.1, Art. 10 (2011), 11.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref89\" name=\"_edn89\">[89]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref90\" name=\"_edn90\">[90]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref91\" name=\"_edn91\">[91]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref92\" name=\"_edn92\">[92]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref93\" name=\"_edn93\">[93]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref94\" name=\"_edn94\">[94]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref95\" name=\"_edn95\">[95]<\/a> Richard R. Osmer. <em>Practical Theology: An Introduction.<\/em> (Grand Rapids: Wm. B Eerdmans Co., 2008), 166.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref96\" name=\"_edn96\">[96]<\/a> Gordon S. Mikoski. \u201cOsmer\u2019s Practical Theology.\u201d Princeton, NJ: Princeton Theological Seminary, 11\/5\/2019. Lecture. We talked during this class about how Revised Correlational Method does not suit (neo)orthodox theological enterprise, because it gives equal weight to social sciences, instead of privileging revelation above all.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref97\" name=\"_edn97\">[97]<\/a> Immanuel Kant. <em>Practical Philosophy. <\/em>Mary J. Gregor, ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996).<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref98\" name=\"_edn98\">[98]<\/a>https:\/\/www.biblegateway.com\/passage\/?search=1+Corinthians+13%3A12&amp;version=NRSV. Footnote a.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref99\" name=\"_edn99\">[99]<\/a> Corinthians 13:12 paraphrased.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref100\" name=\"_edn100\">[100]<\/a> Stephen B. Bevans. <em>Models of Contextual Theology. 2<sup>nd<\/sup> ed. <\/em>(Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 2002), 3.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref101\" name=\"_edn101\">[101]<\/a> John McClure. <em>Otherwise Preaching: A Postmodern Ethic for Homiletics<\/em>. (St. Louis, MO: Chalice Press, 2001).<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref102\" name=\"_edn102\">[102]<\/a> Pete Ward. <em>Introducing Practical Theology. <\/em>(Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2017).<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref103\" name=\"_edn103\">[103]<\/a> Ibid, 116.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref104\" name=\"_edn104\">[104]<\/a> James H. Cone. <em>Said I Wasn\u2019t Gonna Tell Nobody: The Making of a Black Theologian. <\/em>(Marynoll: Orbis Books, 2018), 178-179 (kindle location). (Chapter 1ff)<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref105\" name=\"_edn105\">[105]<\/a> Ibid, loc. 370.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref106\" name=\"_edn106\">[106]<\/a> Name redacted for purposes of privacy.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref107\" name=\"_edn107\">[107]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref108\" name=\"_edn108\">[108]<\/a> <em>Nitro. <\/em>\u201cStudent Loan Debt: A Current Picture of Student Borrowing and Repayment in the United States.\u201d 2019. Accessed 6\/25\/2019. Web. https:\/\/www.nitrocollege.com\/research\/average-student-loan-debt<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref109\" name=\"_edn109\">[109]<\/a> Coltvet, Joy McDonald. \u201cSeminarian Debt: Ethical Challenges.\u201d <em>Journal of Lutheran Ethics. <\/em>Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. April 12, 2012. Accessed 6\/25\/2019. Web. Current link: <a href=\"https:\/\/learn.elca.org\/jle\/seminarian-debt-ethical-challenges\/\">https:\/\/learn.elca.org\/jle\/seminarian-debt-ethical-challenges\/<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ednref110\" name=\"_edn110\">[110]<\/a> I\u2019m not saying that this was right\u2014in fact, it was a dangerous misstep for the institution to have not processed my background check before I began working!<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>[1] In June of 2019, I wrote a letter to the bishop of my synod[1] after I was called into his office to let me know that I had been flagged by the larger denominational structure for \u201cindebtedness.\u201d I was extremely embarrassed by the situation: there I was, explaining why I was in debt, and [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":4,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[12,145,147],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-5685","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-economics","category-ethics","category-pastoral-ethics"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.2 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Everyone is In Debt! 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