Belonging to the World through Body, Trust, and Trinity: Climate Change and Pastoral Care with University Students
Abstract
:1. Background
“Only rarely do students seek pastoral care specifically expressing a need for help because of stress arising from climate change. However, the whole preoccupation with the climate … it is a part of the students’ scenario for the future. It enters the pastoral care room through statements like: ‘I’m now going to live vegan’ or ‘What do we do about the globe?’ or ‘I wonder if we have a future at all?’. The utterances are placed in the periphery. Yet, climate change remains an underlying concern in the foreground conversations. Remarks about food and second-hand clothes, open questions about the acceleration … how difficult it is to stop on your own, like: ‘Can I change it myself?’”Student Chaplain H
2. Aim, Empirical Research, and Methodology
2.1. Aim, Argument, and Outline
2.2. Empirical Material and Method
2.3. Methodology
“Pastoral care is considered to be any form of personal ministry to individuals and to family and community relations by representative religious persons (ordained or lay) and by their community of faith, who understand and guide their caring efforts out of a theological perspective rooted in the tradition of faith.”
3. “Down to Earth”: A Point of Departure for an Ethnographical-Theologically-Driven Pastoral Care Model
“The condition of living with climate change lies as foil on everything in the conversations. They [the students] get in contact with basic anxiety, the anxiety of vanishing. The situation of climate changes appears in one way or the other—intensified by the fact that we seemingly are much, much closer to disaster than we have earlier believed. This triggers conflicts between the generations; it is my boomer-generation who prompted the climate changes and placed the whole responsibility on the youth. So, when we present explanations of meaning (of life), they do not listen at all, saying: ‘You have really no idea what you have done. You have created a situation that leads to the Twilight of the Gods’. I feel it through their anxiety: ‘What is the meaning of life, if we are not here anymore in a few generations?’. The students raise climate issues directly by saying: ‘Well, then there is all that with the climate …’. It is like blind spots appearing in the conversations that you cannot deal with rationally. It’s about gaining more knowledge about it, more, more, more, how to prevent it and what we can do, where is the worst happening, and what is the best to do. It runs constantly on other levels during the pastoral care conversations.”Student Chaplain C
“It is like all over. Like anxiety of the future. Like their future is in liquidation. I can tell the students that it is not an individual problem. Talk with them about it. In itself that is no comfort. That something outside us sets an agenda, that we do not have the power over.”
“A student said that she had been used to hearing a particular bird coming back to the same place year after year. Suddenly the bird wasn’t there anymore. So, the student googled it and found out that it was endanger of total extermination. She became so devastated and sad that life around us is destroyed. Young people are supposed to expand, while biodiversity and climate are about to crash.”
“A dancer is rushing backwards to get away from something she must have found frightening; as she runs, she keeps glancing back more and more anxiously, as if her flight is accumulating obstacles behind her that increasingly impede her movements, until she is forced to turn around. And there she stands, suspended, frozen, her arms hanging loosely, looking at something coming towards her, something even more terrifying than what she was first seeking to escape—until she is forced to recoil. Fleeing from one horror, she has met another, partly created by her flight.”
“There is no cure for the condition of belonging to the world. But, by taking care, we can cure ourselves of believing that we do not belong to it, that the essential question lies elsewhere, that what happens to the world does not concern us. (…) In these matters, hope is a bad counsellor, since we are not in a crisis. We can no longer say ‘this, too, will pass.’ We’re going to have to get used to it. It’s definitive.”(Ibid., p. 13)
“Don’t try to define nature alone, for you’ll have to define the term ‘culture’ as well (the human is what escapes nature: a little, a lot, passionately); don’t try to define ‘culture’ alone, either, for you’ll immediately have to define the term ‘nature’ (the human is what cannot ‘totally escape’ the constraints of nature). Which means that we are not dealing with domains but rather with one and the same concept divided into two parts, which turn out to be bound together, as it were, by a sturdy rubber band. (…) They were born together, as inseparable as Siamese twins who hug or hit each other without ceasing to belong to the same body.”(Ibid., p. 15)
4. Climate Theology
“I usually inquire into the students’ projects as crisis may also grow out from them. To most students who write about sustainability, it is seen as a societal task. They can do something for the environment. But some are confused about how slowly science is moving forward—the stress is related to this, even though it is difficult for them to put it directly into words. Ambitions and career, the character of working stress, contributes to channel that anxiety they feel about what is going to happen in the future. Thus, they do something, going out to look at the trees and birds, prefer to bike instead of driving a car, protest against nuclear power. Much merges exactly there. It is a kind of a monk’s understanding of the world, go out and do good. They live by it. Become vegans. Charity. The matter of the climate is such a charity. Sincerely magnanimous motives.”Student Chaplain X
“The significance of the truth that the transcendent God is with us cannot be overestimated as we struggle to care for the Earth. It means that we are not alone as we face the despair that creeps over us when at last, we acknowledge our responsibility for climate change. We do not face this overwhelming problem on our own: God is with us as the source and power of all our efforts to live differently”.
5. “Mentalizing” and “Epistemic Trust”
“As a chaplain, you let burdens be burdens. The climate problem cannot be fixed. But God makes the whole difference in how the pastoral care conversation turns out, and in exactly that belief lies the relief: The experience of truly speaking about our condition of life here and now. To have trust in life itself, in God, that things are moving, by taking one step at a time.”Student Chaplain L
6. A Down-to-Earth Pastoral Care Model: “Mothering the Content”, “Loving Vital force”, and “Befriending the Environment”
6.1. Mothering the Content
“The awareness of the climate’s changes is experienced by some students as a place of powerlessness. Here, faith becomes involved—in the community together. A student comes and sees me. And then she sobs her heart out. I go round to her and hold her. She is blessed with a nice boyfriend, the right study, a good family. We talk about her sense that she is in some state of powerlessness. She is to discover the things she has got … The Mother-Child-feeling appears thinking: ‘Oh, you little biscuit’. The care. The young ones are to take responsibility for their lives. Evidently, of course, it is a shock, suddenly to become and be grown up. Feelings storm within them. They have to take a position on so many things—achieve endlessly, love affairs. It is a bit like Ecclesiastes. It is new experience. Then we try to break it down together into many small winds, instead of one big storm. … In the gospels we find plenty of love and pain and suffering …”Student Chaplain Z
6.2. Loving Engagement
“I experience how students stress out about climate change—about eating vegan, food production, recycling—the social control that goes on. It lies implicitly as something stressful, but is expressed directly by saying: ‘I am not good enough—because I am not good enough!’ It is very difficult for them to be in here. I tell them ‘down to Earth’. We wonder if it is okay to put our feet on the ground and live this life. Climate changes are not stopped by not seeing and not living. Creating a peaceful space in the pastoral care room, I attempt to let the student’s inner voices be heard so that we can talk with their inner voices, wonder about what the voices are saying. Let voices that control, what they can’t stand about themselves, come out. There are voices they are scared of. We try to find out if some of the voices also contain some good. On the positive, the voices are concerned with the climate, but they may have prevailed in the student’s mind, shouting too much. Together we wonder about how the inner voices tell us to sustain life—socially and earthly—but wonder if, maybe, the voices need to be calmed down. We say to the shouting voice: ‘You are good enough, but now you must lie down a bit’. We treat stress and anxiety a little like a guard dog that needs to be calmed. The voice is to be heard, but needs to be let off a bit sometimes. By doing this we express our trust in it, that there is also something that holds us in the middle of our stress. To have trust in life. To get from control and mistrust—daring to take a few steps and see if it holds. Have faith that life holds us. ‘And if it doesn’t?’, some students ask. There are no guarantees. But the alternative is a life with hands clenched and mistrust. To have faith that something holds me up, that is deeply Christian. We cannot take responsibility for it all. I say sometimes (with a caring smile): ‘You don’t have that much power’. Otherwise, we must think that we ourselves are God. As chaplain it is about stopping ‘private metaphysics’.”Student Chaplain L
6.3. Befriending the Environment
“The students are certainly very aware of climate change—at the same time, these are very abstract, because we don’t really experience them in Denmark. I mention this, when we are out on our arranged moss and mushroom excursions. We attempt to make the students engage in nature. What you have knowledge about, you care more about. What you care about, you are interested to know more about. You may be able to teach the students to care for biodiversity by teaching them that there exists more than one bird, but many species, by learning their different names, learning that you can find them in our [local] nature and be absorbed in them—or in plants and flowers—and that the life that goes on is of interest. Learning that the way moss grows and reproduces and lives is extremely interesting, although alien to us. To arouse their curiosity in nature by naming all things. To raise questions. To philosophize about them while we walk: does it actually bring a greater understanding of nature and make our relation to nature different, when we are able to say: ‘Hey! That was a cormorant’, instead of ‘I think there was a bird’ What it means, when it is named. I think it plays a rather big role. The crisis of biodiversity … my excitement for such action is related to the Christian idea that it is your duty to save the world. When you get so preoccupied with a bird, well, then love is obliged. When you love something, you cannot help but do acts of good.”Student Chaplain P
“I talk with the students about living in the moment and being present instead living only in the future ‘Also try to live now and grasp the day instead of just putting all your strength and courage and hope and faith and joy out in the future. You don’t know if you are going to be here tonight or tomorrow, and neither do I’. Try to get them to relate to their life. If they constantly try to calculate it in advance, say: ‘Are you to figure it out beforehand?’ I turn to action: ‘Just do it!’ ‘The plastic wrap is to be saved now!’.”
7. Conclusions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Johannessen, C.T. Belonging to the World through Body, Trust, and Trinity: Climate Change and Pastoral Care with University Students. Religions 2022, 13, 527. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13060527
Johannessen CT. Belonging to the World through Body, Trust, and Trinity: Climate Change and Pastoral Care with University Students. Religions. 2022; 13(6):527. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13060527
Chicago/Turabian StyleJohannessen, Christine Tind. 2022. "Belonging to the World through Body, Trust, and Trinity: Climate Change and Pastoral Care with University Students" Religions 13, no. 6: 527. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13060527
APA StyleJohannessen, C. T. (2022). Belonging to the World through Body, Trust, and Trinity: Climate Change and Pastoral Care with University Students. Religions, 13(6), 527. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13060527