The Mystery of Transformative Times and Space

Exploring a Theology of Grassroots Peacebuilding

The Mystery of Transformative Times and Space: Exploring a Theology of Grassroots Peacebuilding
“Reconciliation is the mystery of entry into an arena, a space, not well defined by doctrine or the logical of cognitive rational explanation. Mystery is intuitively a journey toward the Divine, toward a sacred place, like the Burning Bush, where the presence of God is encountered. But such a journey requires faith because the destination is not known, nor the pathway familiar."

My contribution to this research project has been to reflect on the process, findings and discussions from a theological point of view. When I first received the phone call from Tom Bamat about participating with the Maryknoll initiative, I thought he had made a mistake.

“You know I am sociologist and a practice-oriented conciliator?” I enquired at the other end of his first phone call. “I am not a theologian. In fact, even though I find it annoying, you should know that many of my theological colleagues critique my work by saying it has no theology.” “We know you are not a theologian,” he responded. “What we want is simple. Just talk about what you see theologically from the standpoint of your experience and insights.”

So it was that a Mennonite sociologist-mediator type agreed to provide theological reflections for a Catholic research endeavor on responses of Christian grassroots communities to violence. And herein lie the introductory caveats…

Lederach, John Paul. “The Mystery of Transformative Times and Space: Exploring a Theology of Grassroots Peacebuilding.” In Artisans of Peace: Grassroots Peacemaking Among Christian Communities, edited by Mary Ann Cejka and Thomas Bamat. Maryknoll, New York: Orbis Books, 2003.

read

Once downloaded, PDFs can be translated via Google Translate

connect

situate this material in the web of John Paul's vocational reflections

explore

related items you might be interested in

Beyond Prescription: Perspectives on Conflict, Culture, and Training

A manuscript written for the Inter-racial and Cross-cultural Conflict Resolution Project at Conrad Grebel College's Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies.

Preparing for Peace: Conflict Transformation Across Cultures

An exploration of prescriptive and elicitive methods of training and conflict work across cultures that places emphasis on the resources emergent from the context and setting of a given conflict. 

The Journey Toward Reconciliation

An exploration into the spiritual foundations that undergird John Paul's work as a practitioner and scholar of peacebuilding.