Welcoming the "Other" - DPT

NT/MS 5XH5

Starts online April 22nd, in-class sessions are May 7-8, and ends June 7th.

The welcome of the other is foundational in the identity and function of the people of God, and intimately connected with God’s presence, promise and blessing. How do we define welcome? Who do we identify as the other (and who are “we”?)? What practices can we cultivate to welcome the other? The framework of this course will draw on concepts connected with the invitation of radical hospitality combined with the movement towards incarnational actions of becoming the other, crossing boundaries, sojourning and tearing down walls. By sharing our life, experiences and research interests, we will together identify the other, expand and build on the definition and practices of welcome, and populate the category of the other along with input from a select variety of people in the field and on the front lines. During the face-to-face time, we will concentrate on pooling our resources and building the biblical and theological bases for the praxis of radical hospitality together with incarnational identity and action rooted in the nature of God.

This is a hybrid course in which we combine two face-to-face sessions with online components: we will use Avenue to Learn as well as other online technologies. We open the semester with an online Webex session on April 23 at 3:30 p.m. EST.

Knowing…

  • Understand how the design of practice-led research intersects and functions in the
    relationship between one’s life experience, ministry and research interest and specific practices of welcoming the other
  • Possess a strong biblical and theological basis for your practice-led research that can be
    clearly articulated
  • Extend your understanding of welcome and the other to larger contexts and new
    possibilities.

Being…

  • Awareness of your place, connection and circle of influence
  • Cultivated empathy for the other based on who you are & your past experience
  • Commitment to hospitality and an incarnational ministry consistent with your calling
  • Maturing habits of devotion & self-care that support the demanding nature of the
    discipline

Doing…

  • Develop your specialization in terms of the nature and needs of your ministry target
    group and the practices/disciplines of welcome
  • Present your work, accept critique & function as a resource to others in the course
  • Design practical implementation of appropriate actions
  • Demonstrate practice-led research in writing