Last formation weekend we were exposed to method of running meetings called Open Space Technology.
Open Space Technology enables groups of any size to address complex, important issues and achieve meaningful results quickly.
I have to say I’m not the one to quickly jump on the band wagon of the latest fad to be introduced. And I’m certainly one who is more interested in structured approaches to things. I prefer to know the who, what how, where and when of things; not the whoever comes, whatever happens approach we heard about and experienced on out last formation weekend.
But I’m also one to acknowledge insight from things, regardless of how ‘gimmicky’ it can sound at the time. We had an opportunity to experience this style of meeting leadership. Where you basically ‘go with the flow’ and essentially what happens happens.
So there we were sitting around but finally conversations began to take off. Of course what happens on tour stays on tour but I’m happy to share some interesting observations I made from the session about the experiences I have been having with formation over the last year; which as some know has been the proverbial roller coaster ride.
The main insight for me was that when it comes to participating in the formation program I’m currently involved in I sometimes feel out of phase, kind of like trying to stand in two worlds at one time and not necessarily feeling anchored in either one. The consequence seems to be a tendency toward bucking at the feeling of being out of sync. What does that mean.
Well on the one hand I feel like I’ve already survived a formation process where my world for a while was turned upside down and all over the place. Landing in pieces I felt like I had to re-establish my world as a person taking on a life in religious vows. And for a while that seemed to be heading toward a calm sea. I could see direction and began to feel as though my sense of vocation have finally found some beginnings of stability.
Then when I commenced the ordained ministry formation program I felt jolted right back to the roller coaster again. I felt I was being asked to go back to the beginning of that whole process of being torn apart and being ‘formed’ again, but this time only to essentially return to do the things I was doing already. I also felt that while there was an abstact level of acknowledgement of my previous roller coaster ride of formation there was no sesne of a concrete acceptance of it.
On the weekend as I talked about how I was feeling about this, how I felt in some sense being pulled between two worlds I began to realise where part of the tension comes for me and how that tension gets expressed often in not so productive ways.
As I was driving down the freeway tonight, or should I say sitting in the Coronation Drv parking lot, I was thinking a little more about this. I was trying to get to College to join some other ordinands for evening prayer.
As I was waiting for a parking officer to come along and book me for being in a no standing zone, commonly called the express way, I realised another aspect of the tension. In some respects many ordinands have been told to give up their former lives of positions they had in the secular world to enter a new mode of vocation, hence the need for a period of transition and time of adjusting and learning, commonly called formation.
Yet here I was leaving behind my community who I would normally be with for evening prayer to be with another community for evening prayer, thinking that this is where it all feels a bit odd, and out of sync. That is while it is true of many, but certainly not all ordinands, formation is a period of leaving one mode of life and entering another; specifically, leaving a world of predominantly secular to predominantly religious, for myslelf and a few others, this is not such a clean distinction.
For those who have held secular professions and now moving toward a religious vocation that cut seem clean and necessary. But what of people who are in the process, for whom there is no leaving, no clean cut. That is, I am not being called out of religious life as a Franciscan to start a new religious vocation. I will continue to live the vows I have taken in the community I made my profession in; and God willing soon make this a life decision and make my life profession in vows. I am not being called to seperate from vocation but rather to continue to express that vocation, perhaps with an added dimension of ordained ministry.
When attend a Tuesday Mass or Friday evening prayer I think about how I leave my community that I am called to, to be a part of a group that I feel out of step with.
I hope reading this you don’t get the impression that I think I know it all and that the formation program I am presently a part of has no value. It does. I think that what I am saying is that I need to look at how being part of two expression of vocation, one of which I feel formed and in continual formation with, and the other which feels like it is sending me back to the beginnings of the life long journey of formation that I began over 5 years ago, feels to me like I’m out of sync and constantly having to adjust each time I move between the two.
I think this was the most significant part of my last weekend, and has given me some interesting things to think about.
Tags: Formation, open space technology, vocation
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Hi Nathan,
I’m extremely sceptical of Open Space Technology. I’ve been to too many group training exercise things that seem to be awesome and cool while you’re there buzzed up on coffee and being rewarded for every good idea that you have etc… only to find that nothing comes of it and when you think back on it, there was no point to any of it. But it makes the CEOs feel good and that’s what counts and feeds into their popularity (i.e. the CEO gets to see all his employees looking like they are busy and engaged so mistakes this for a functional organisation). On the other hand, encouraging groups of people to get together and talk is good for morale so I’m sure it all works out in the end.
I can see how the formation program is pretty weird for you. Kind of like going to high school twice. There’s always lots to learn and people to get to know but in terms of the experience: why do it twice?
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