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During the month of November
members of the Word Made Flesh team share reflections on partnership and
challenge us to move beyond our current understanding of what it means to be
partners with one another to the glory of God and for the advancement of the
Gospel in word and deed.
Most of us want to be in partnerships and like the idea of
it. It may have worked well for us in the past, and may still be a significant
portion of our work. However, the pressing question for us is, are the
partnerships liberating for those involved, and not just accomplishing the
objectives of association? It’s obvious to all of us that partnerships are
rooted in relationship, which is the base of this spirit-led initiative.
The gifts of partnership embolden alliances, inspire
creativity and encourage collaborative progress, but its essence is nurtured in
sustained egalitarian relationships, confessing domination, mutual empowerment
and embodied love.
In light of the above, the critical challenge for us in the
mission community is finding ways of how we can wade through the legacy of
colonialism, keeping in mind how it has defined these basic relationships that
are so essential to life giving partnerships. The distraught it has brought in
relationships make firm the institutions of nationalism, militarism,
patriarchy, and racism that stand as a stronghold working against the
partnerships we hope nurture.
The legacy of colonialism challenges our “good and right”
intentions. Those of us who find ourselves working tirelessly alongside the
worlds most vulnerable can sometimes find ourselves living in tension – the
tension of assimilating into the very systems of domination that maintain the
status quo of poverty, racism, and war, or learning to live into a new, whole
reality of flourishing life free from domination. What is the alternative that
we alongside our most vulnerable friends can imagine? Do we still hold onto the
“colonial image” of Christ as the one who lifts our friends up from the margins
of society, who integrates them into mainline society, that they, too, can then
find there place within the status quo and benefit from it?
Sustaining egalitarian relationships in love are
challenging, and are continually heightened by our inability to place our story
within the layers of stories that uphold power dynamics of oppression. The oppressions
of race, sex, class, and privilege need to be rattled and undone to begin our
work of confessing domination. Harry Brod makes a very important point
regarding privilege which I think is applicable to understanding our role and
place. He writes,
We need to be clear that there is no
such thing as giving up ones privilege to be ‘outside’ the system. One is
always in the system. The only question is whether one is a part of system in a
way that challenges or strengthens the status quo. Privilege is not something I
take and which therefore have the option of not taking. It is something that
society gives me, and unless I change the institutions that give it to me, they
will continue to give it, and I will continue to have it, however noble and
equalitarian my intentions. (Work Clothes and Leisure Suits: The Class Basis
and Bias of the Men’s Movement,” in Men’s Lives, ed. Michael S. Kimmel and
Michael Messner, Macmillan, 1989, p280).
I point this out not to shy us away from the challenges of
relating to strengthen partnerships, but to invite us to the other side of coin
i.e. mutual empowerment. Mutuality removes from the equation hierarchy, and
brings in solidarity. It not only empowers those who are beginning with lesser
power, but also creates a greater sense of shared responsibility and trust in
the act of confessing domination.
Partnership as a Spirit-led initiative is an act of embodied
love, and it is only in this spirit -this posture - that we can find the space for
whole partnerships. These are the spaces of inclusion out which partnerships
flourish in the authenticity of the partners and not out of a dominating
normative paradigm.
Caldwell Manners serves as the International
Partnership Coordinator for World Made
Flesh. Give him something to climb, he most likely will.
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