Milwaukee's St. Ben's Community Meal, guest and volunteer. |
This is a sign of the times: Thousands of Catholic
young adults now participate in service projects and even in a year-long
volunteer corps. These volunteer opportunities are not only offered through Catholic
schools, religious orders and agencies. Other denominations and secular
institutions also have service projects in which Catholics serve along with
others. Volunteerism is hardly new in our country, though service requirements
in school, mission trips in college and post-grad volunteer corps are recent
developments—at least in their current scope. In the old days young adults more
or less sought out volunteer opportunities on their own, for mixed motives: to
change society, to learn from a charismatic leader, or (in my case anyway) to
meet women. Today’s young adults, their program leaders and the service
agencies are all to be applauded.
Michael
Laskey of Camden, writing in U.S.
Catholic (11/14), wonders though if “the default approach [to young adult
volunteering] is out of whack.” He is all for service but, he asks, how many
young adults really form a relationship with those they serve? Like most North
Americans, Laskey admits to a “preference for the quick fix.” Volunteering
often becomes a one-way effort to get the job done, Laskey finds. Do young
adult volunteers, he concludes, ever “confront any suffering or ask difficult
questions about the world” or about themselves?
CapCorps Midwest Volunteers celebrating 20 tears of volunteerism
At one
time Laskey’s own forays into volunteerism were premised on tackling “solutions
to injustices.” He came to think that maybe it is better to “start with
relationships.” His acquired approach, he says, seems more in harmony with Pope
Francis’ themes of going to the peripheries to build “a culture of encounter.”
“Going
out to others in order to reach the fringes of humanity does not mean rushing
out aimlessly into the world,” writes Pope Francis. “Often it is better simply
to slow down, put aside our eagerness in order to see and listen to others.”
Francis intends
to encourage people and so admits that some might feel “offended by my words.”
Yet, he continues, the dominant culture likes “the immediate, the visible, the
quick, the superficial and the provisional.” Christian service, by contrast,
should first be about encounter—not “simply an accumulation of small personal gestures
to individuals in need, a kind of charity
a la carte.” And second, it should “make an impact on society” by “working
to eliminate structural causes of poverty.”
Marquette University's Service Learning Program |
It is
hard to create bridging relationships, says Paul Lichterman in Elusive Togetherness (Princeton
University Press, 2005), his case study of nine volunteer and advocacy projects
that explores the tension between lending-a-hand
service and partnering. The less
fortunate can seem inscrutable, Lichterman admits. So the best-intentioned
volunteers often proceed with partial understanding, unconcerned with the
larger map of the culture and civic world around the needy. The volunteers complete
the task, yet have loose connections to the less fortunate and even to one
another—not only in direct service projects but in policy campaigns, like for
example those concerned with a living wage or with eliminating trafficking.
Service learning project at Mount Mary University, Milwaukee |
Young adult volunteering is a marvelous development. Its graduates are included in the powerful 2%. But their project leaders and the young adults might reflect on their experience with an eye toward the public arts of encounter: How will this experience carry over into my career and family life? Does this experience, perhaps in synergy with Catholic tradition, suggest any principles that can be used on my job or in my own culture? And did I develop an appropriate public friendship with my fellow volunteers and those we tried to serve?
Droel
is editor of INITIATIVES, a newsletter about faith and work. Get INITIATIVES
and Joy of the Gospel, Pope Francis’
fuller thoughts on a culture of encounter, from National Center for the Laity
(PO Box 291102, Chicago, IL 60629; $10 pre-paid).
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