It's practical
One of the troubling things I find about local-church theology (id est theology lived out in local churches) is how by saying the words "practical" or "it is just not practical" is able to bracket out all other theological reflection, plus all considerations of community and reduces people back to the automatons the church tries to eliminate.
For example, it is not practical to invite strangers into your home (they could be psychos). It is not practical to leave home with only a robe and not even a staff. It is not practical not to save money for the future. This could go on and on and I do not mean this in a demeaning way. I am not saying that seminarians get it right (by God they do not, I do not), what I am interested in is how, as a pastor, this realm of practicality can be broken down. How do we teach that there is no realm of life where Jesus is not Lord without the self-righteousness of my own tone here? Plus, what does practical theology have to do with this, where I see 'practical theology' as a passive aggressive attempt to diminish impractical theology. Am I wrong in this dismissal of the practical?
For example, it is not practical to invite strangers into your home (they could be psychos). It is not practical to leave home with only a robe and not even a staff. It is not practical not to save money for the future. This could go on and on and I do not mean this in a demeaning way. I am not saying that seminarians get it right (by God they do not, I do not), what I am interested in is how, as a pastor, this realm of practicality can be broken down. How do we teach that there is no realm of life where Jesus is not Lord without the self-righteousness of my own tone here? Plus, what does practical theology have to do with this, where I see 'practical theology' as a passive aggressive attempt to diminish impractical theology. Am I wrong in this dismissal of the practical?