The month nearly passed by without a single blog post, and I
blame it on school. Graduate School to
be precise. For the past year and a half
I have been working on a Masters
in Religion in Middle Eastern and North African Studies (MRel) through the Institute of Middle East
Studies at the Arab Baptist
Theological Seminary. In short, the
program looks at the many dynamics of the region (history, politics, culture,
religion, etc…) and examines how people of faith can develop the theology and
practices to approach this unique context in a meaningful way. So far it has been a very rich experience that
is giving me tremendous insight into my professional and personal presence in Lebanon .
The MRel consists of four modules and a capstone final
project. Each module involves 20 weeks
of online study and two weeks of residency study in Lebanon at the middle of the term. The current module is Middle
East and North African Cultures and I just completed a very
intense 12 days of residency training. We
spent a lot of time looking at culture from a social science perspective and
investigating matters of personal and group identity, topics of missiology, and
specific cultures in the region.
For me it was a very fast and hard exposure to the technical
field of the Social Sciences (sociology, anthropology, cultural and ethnic
studies, etc…). We spent a significant
time learning about and applying ethnographic research with all it
methodologies and techniques. The
highlight was a weekend home-stay with a Druze family in the Chouf Mountains . It was a real laboratory of examining culture
while making some inspiring human connections. Despite a life spent bouncing across culture
lines, these lessons and exercises greatly enhanced my observation and interpretation
of culture. It’s like I acquired a
sharper pair of glasses to view the environments and people around me. I had been watching culture on VHS but now I’m
enjoying it in BluRay! Not only is such a study significant to my work at Dar
El Awlad and my many cross-cultural personal relationships (including my
marriage!), but the subject matter leads me to examine my own identity, social
roles, and personal dimensions. The MRel
is continuing to be very much a curriculum for self-discovery and awareness.
Despite the amount of time, readings, lectures, outings and
discussions at these residencies, I often feel like we barely get past the
surface of the topics we examine. There
is so much depth to all these matters and they play out so distinctly in each
specific context and individual. It has
been satisfying to apply what I am learning to the contexts where I am. I can’t guarantee that it is making me more
effective at what I do, but I can say that it is helping me on a great personal
journey of recognizing the challenges of this world, celebrating the opportunities
around us, and becoming more and more comfortable with God’s greatness and my
smallness in it all.
God bless you brother.
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