Spirituality in the Pub: Finding voice in a monological church
Date
2018
Authors
Skousgaard, Heather Suzanne
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Publisher
Canberra, ACT : The Australian National University
Abstract
In July 1994, a handful of devoted but disillusioned Roman
Catholics gathered in Sydney, Australia, to explore how they
might spark renewal in a Church that simultaneously frustrated
their minds and lives yet captivated their hearts and souls. As
loyal Catholics, they were determined to avoid being branded
rebels, but nonetheless they felt an urgent need for a safe
space, beyond church walls, in which they could voice their fears
and hopes for the Church they loved. And so, ‘Spirituality in
the Pub’ was born – a lay-driven space in which priests, nuns
and bishops were welcome, but in which the voices of all
participants were to be valued equally, independent of their
religious credentials.
This thesis explores the outcomes of my ethnographic
participation in the ‘Spirituality in the Pub’ (SIP)
movement. It introduces a fieldsite that is paradoxically defined
by devotion and anger, loyalty and dissent, in which participants
(or ‘Sippers’) seek to become ‘honest brokers of
conversation’ in a Church that remains bound by a monological
imagination – one in which church leaders hold the only voices
of authority. Situated within the broader setting of what
sociologists have termed the ‘spiritual revolution’ and
‘emerging church’ movements of the late twentieth century,
this thesis paints a portrait of one group’s response to the
growing crisis of authority they observed in the Catholic Church
since the watershed revolution of the 1960s, known as the
‘Second Vatican Council’, or ‘Vatican II’.
Choosing not to become paralysed by anger over what they see as
the refusal of key church leaders to fully embrace the empowered
lay spirituality of Vatican II, Sippers instead attempt to
channel this aggrieved passion into a productive energy that
maintains their commitment to the spiritual foundations of the
Church. Fortifying themselves with the emancipatory resources of
the Catholic faith tradition, Sippers draw on the emotional,
social and symbolic riches of their religious identity as they
strive to remain loyal to the Church, despite the many hurts and
frustrations it brings them. Seeking to live ‘imaginatively and
creatively’ within the structures of the Church, Sippers form
parallel lines in their lives by attending both SIP and Mass;
separate but mutually supportive arenas that help them to live
within the creative tension of both loyalty and dissent as they
work to renew their Church from within.
This research project advances the body of empirical knowledge
regarding the newly developing constructs of ‘loyal dissent’
and ‘religious agency’. At the heart of Sippers’ religious
agency lies a conversational methodology that seeks Church
renewal by emphasising mutuality and understanding over
confrontation and conflict. By fostering a ‘theology of
conversation’, Sippers have come to develop their own unique
strategies of audibility in an effort to feel heard against the
monologic forces of the Catholic Church. In this way, the SIP
movement seeks to fulfil its promise to remain faithful to the
Church while also fostering a vital spirituality of hope that
energises Sippers’ ongoing expressions of loyal dissent.
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Keywords
anthropology, Spirituality in the Pub, religion, religious agency, voice, dissent, loyalty, loyal dissent, conversation, theology, Australian Catholicism, Roman Catholicism, christianity, spirituality, Vatican II, secularism, secularisation, emerging church, spirituality revolution, monologic, religious identity, infallibility, dialogue, hope, post-Vatican II
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Thesis (PhD)
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