IMAGE: FIFTH CITY
When asked about the nature and purpose of the community which is The Ecumenical Institute: Chicago, the faculty usually identify it as a research and training center dedicated to the task of the renewal of the church through the renewal of the local congregation, for the sake of the entire world in which we live. In that statement is contained everything that needs to be said. And in a way, it is not much different from what any responsible churchman would have to say about the particular organization of which he was a part. And yet there are a number of unusual facets to the life and program of the Ecumenical Institute that have caused friends and opponents alike to describe it as a 'mystery'. Taken part by part, there is little that the Institute has said or done that could genuinely be termed new. What is new, and what lends vitality to everything that |
it touches, is the remarkable integrity of the synthesis which
has been formed out of a multiplicity of diverse concepts and
ideas taken from many sources.
This article will attempt to describe some of the elements of
that multiplicity. But more important will be the effort to describe
the wholeness of the program, and the interrelatedness of the
separate parts. The Ecumenical Institute is a missional community.
The mission alone is the source of all community motivation and
power. We shall begin with a descriptive summary of the entire
project, establishing a context for the more detailed program
analysis. In each of the three major sections on the national
teaching program, the 5th City community reformulation project
and the residential faculty community which comprises The Ecumenical
Institute, we shall generally proceed by giving the operating
presuppositions for each part, and then return to the concretions.
Cultural revolution, technological revolution, social upheaval,
'mutation in humanness', 'systemic revolution', all these
are terms that can be found in the recent literature from any
field of the humanities. Where once words like these had the stimulus
effect of a red cape in a bull ring, now they are almost clichés.
Sociologists and churchmen, psychologists and economists, city
planners and art critics, share a notable degree of consensus
in their diagnosis of the modern world situation. And rarely is
such a diagnosis omitted from their writings. What is striking
about all of these terms is not that they are pointing to the
ancient observation that the world is going to pot. But rather,
there is a note of hopefulness in them, a lurking suspicion that
some special opportunity is upon us, if only we could grasp it.
It is a deep sensing after that suspected opportunity that drives
and motivates the Ecumenical Institute faculty in all that it
does.
The mission, or the task, of The Ecumenical Institute has two
primary elements to it which are really a single complete thrust:
the national program in theological education and the 5th City
community reformulation project. The first is a curriculum of
sixteen intensive, highly condensed courses of study, usually
given over a fortyfour hour weekend. Over this past year
more than 16,000 people participated in these courses. The Institute
normally teaches between two and three hundred per weekend on
its own Chicago campus. Roughly another 9,000 attend courses arranged
by interested laymen and clergy around the nation. In the Spring
1967 teaching quarter, for example, 56 courses were sponsored
in 35 separate U.S. cities, representing 20 states. The remainder
of the participants are taught in special, extended weekday
programs for clergymen and in weeknight schools in the Chicago
area. A first this year was a team of teachers sent to Southeast
Asia for the specific purpose of presenting the curriculum in
that part of the world. The effort was warmly received, and plans
are now well underway to extend this international thrust considerably
in the coming year. It is interesting to note that each year since
the present faculty assumed its assignment in Chicago, the program
has doubled in size.
The name for the 5th City Community reformulation Project comes
from a topological scheme for classifying the people of the metropolitan
area into subcities'. (For example, the second city are
people who have decided to return to the city, living in the larger
downtown apartment buildings, liberal in orientation but not working
structurally for the reformulation of the city.) The 5th City
are people who have decided to pick up the task of reformulating
the city in our time.
5th City includes sixteen blocks and about 4560 people. The project
is designed to provide the initial enabling thrust which will
make possible a selfconscious community capable of mobilizing
its own leadership and resources to care for the needs of its
own people. Project strategy falls into two parts: the development
of a strong sense of community identity and pride, and the implementation
of simple yet flexible organizational structures to provide or
channel all necessary community services. The role of the Institute
staff is that of starting motor or perhaps a pump primer. It provides
the initially high input of resources and personnel to get the
structural machinery operating.
Put in these terms, the job sounds comparatively simple. It is
not, of course. But the project is pushing in the direction which
seems inevitable if American cities, and cities all over the world
for that matter, are going to be able to destroy the fatiguing
disease which is gradually sapping urban life. By now it is clear
to everyone that no amount of low rent highrise housing
will solve the fundamental problems of the inner city any more
than soup and bread lines could solve the problems brought on
by the great depression of the 30's. Nor will the best of individually
directed social services solve the problem, although as adjuncts
to community reformulation, all of these things and many more
are utterly necessary. The intention behind the 5th City project
is not merely to do a fancy job of 'clearing up the neighborhood'.
it is primarily intended to develop methodologies to work in this
situation, and which will be readily transferable to any urban
slum or ghetto situation
It is at this critical point of transferability that the 5th City project and the national theological education program are tied in with one another. To speak of the renewal of the church without an adequate demonstration of what this would mean in actual practice is simply to pose more riddles for those faithful but benumbed churchmen who have long ago grown weary of struggling to separate theological wheat from chaff. Yet without the education program, 5th City would be but one more church initiated social service project, no matter how clever its method, no matter how effective its result. This is not to say that such Projects are not important and praiseworthy. They are, and a great debt of gratitude is owed the men who had the courage to begin them. But the church's responsibility in history has been to hold individual and local needs in constant tension with the total human need. And the history of the church has demonstrated over and over again that this is only possible when the 'Word' and the 'Deed' are held in the same relationship of tension.
Therefore, in principle, the national theological education program
corresponds to the Word, and the 5th City project corresponds
to the Deed. In practice, of course, both become the expression
of the Word and the Deed. And if this is so, then whatever contribution
The Ecumenical Institute may have to make to the historic church
hinges upon the accomplishment of both foci, and not just on one
or the other. Success at one point and failure at the other is
tantamount to failure at both.
So The Ecumenical Institute: Chicago is attempting to provide
a prototype for the operation of the local church. It is obviously
impossible for one or even a small committee of men to carry the
burden of such responsibility. Yet illustrations of such are known
to everyone where competent and courageous men have tried to assume
this burden, and failing, have left the church. What is required
is a community. This means not just an organization, but a genuine
community. In a conventional organizational hierarchy, the difficulty
in holding the WordDeed tension becomes a near impossibility.
Unless there is a specific precise task, like mining coal or building
automobiles, the tendency of an administrative structure is to
pull talent and resources off the production line and into its
own system. The actual line operation tends to lose out in status,
and therefore in talent and efficiency. For these reasons, and
a great many more, the faculty of The Ecumenical Institute has
constituted itself into a community, or an 'order' if you like.
The Order has often held the greatest interest for those observing
the Institute life, which is a bit unfortunate, because it is
like watching the hammer instead of the nail. Still, this is understandable,
for a religious order seems to be something of an anachronism
in the 20th century. Actually, it only becomes an anachronism
if one focuses upon the community for its own sake, and forgets
that it exists only to accomplish the missional task. The power
of any community comes from its preoccupation with the mission,
and not the other way around. It enables whole participation in
a total mission by people who find themselves unwilling to allow
their working lives to be reduced to one role or specialty. Not
that the community does not have specialists. It does. But the
specialists are also engaged regularly in making the overall policy
decisions for the entire operation, not normally a possibility
in conventional organizational structure.
Let us now proceed to a more detailed description of each of these
three major aspects of the life of The Ecumenical Institute: Chicago.
The purpose of this program is as already indicated, to assist
in the enormous task of the renewal of the church for the sake
of the world. I n order to accomplish this the curriculum is designed
to give historical, Biblical and theological grounding to the
life and mission of the church. This, of course, is the objective
of any valid effort in Christian education. Materials are often
produced by the churches which are on a level of sophistication
and quality competitive with the best of nonchurch teaching
materials, and much is vastly superior to the average sort of
textbook writing. But the problem, as any church publications
editor knows, is usually in the classroom, and has to do with
the teaching methodology.
So that even if the theological education task is done well, churchmen
and laymen together have often had the problem of finding practical
material which could genuinely be described as practical. Materials
which attempt to describe and analyze cultural, political and
economic life in the modern world tend to be obscure and 'unreadable.
The faculty of The Ecumenical Institute has set itself the task
of building curriculum which handles all three of the above tasks:
the theological foundation, the cultural description and analysis,
and the practical description of field method. In addition, the
corporate faculty has developed its own pedagogical methodology
over a period of years, which it has found to be highly effective.
In all of this, articles and papers by the best of contemporary
and ancient writers have been used in preference to second hand
interpretations. For instance, the theological curriculum uses
sections from the work of Tillich, Bultmann, Bonhoeffer and H.
Richard Niebuhr to name only four. The cultural curriculum uses
selections from Mumford, Sartre, Ortega y Gasset, Eliade and May.
The selection has been made over a period of years and is constantly
being expanded.
The cornerstone of the pedagogical method has been the course
structure. Always the progression of movement is from the actual
concrete situation being dealt with, to viable alternatives which
the situation offers, to the attitude or activity, which can make
the possibility into actualities. Within this structure, there
is a fundamental correlation between the theological content and
the theological method. As those who have experienced an Institute
course are aware, the juncture occurs through the particular understanding
of the Trinitarian formula of God the Father, Son and Holy Spirit
which is presented. Further analysis would require a detailed
description of the course content itself, which the space does
not permit. But suffice it to say, the faithful adherence to this
structure has been both the unique genius of The Ecumenical Institute
curriculum and the point at which it has received its greatest
criticism. That this is so is no accident, and it has had ample
precedent throughout the history of the church.
The primary role of the teacher in every session is to enable
dialogue. This does not mean dialogue between the teacher and
the student, or between one student and another. There are times
when that sort of dialogue is necessary and important, but the
Institute faculty has not sensed its primary role in this way.
Rather the emphasis has been upon the dialogue between the student
and the document he is studying. The struggle is, first, to find
out precisely what it is that the author is saying, and secondly,
to pin down where in the students' experience of life he has seen
the particular idea or situation occurring. It is the belief that
only in this way can the usual tendency in so-called 'lay theology'
toward playing intellectual or romantic games be avoided, and
the actual profundity of our greatest theological thinkers be
encountered.
Hence, the theological method is primarily life descriptive rather than life prescriptive, as so much secondrate theologizing has tended to be. This would seem obvious on reflection, and yet the essential insight here has been obfuscated by a great deal of amateur philosophizing, psychologizing and sociologizing, The struggle over the word 'relevance' in the Church today is only one symptom of the fog. It is correct to say that much of the thought that comes out of the Institute has been deeply influenced by existential and phenomenological thought as they have impacted Western civilization. But finally, if there is any justification for this, it comes in the sense of freedom and release which so many experience upon encountering these insights.
While we are considering method, there is one further feature
which must be pointed out, particularly with reference to the
theological side of the curriculum. Usually, the logic is inductive
rather than deductive: which is to say, the course content is
not arrived at by taking a survey of church opinion on the meaning
of the doctrine of God, or even a survey of the theologians. Instead,
the procedure is to describe the critical on-goingness of life,
and then name them in theological categories. If this seems a
bit arbitrary, one might examine the work of the 20th century
church's leading theologians-Tillich, Bultmann, H. Richard Niebuhr,
Reinhold Niebuhr, Bonhoeffer, or Barth-in order to discover a
clear precedent. It might also be suggested that, with this in
mind, even the most skeptical of religious skeptics might find
new insights in the New Testament, particularly in the Gospel
of John, or the works of the Fathers: Augustine, St. Bonaventure,
Aquinas, Luther, Wesley, Schleiermacher or Rauschenbush.
The basic theological course (RS1 ) is a prerequisite for
all other courses. Having completed this, the student then goes
on to a series of twelve advanced courses in both the theological
curriculum and the cultural curriculum. Three courses in each
are designed to deal principally with theory, and three in each
with practice, although both are rooted in theological understanding
and in the wisdom of 20th century thought. Literature is available
through The Ecumenical Institute: Chicago giving the course schedule
and a brief synopsis of the content of each course. But perhaps
a word or two about several of the courses selected at random
is in order to give some of the flavor or mood of the curriculum
The course in Church History is particularly interesting from
the standpoint of method. Rather than beginning at some arbitrarily
chosen point in the past, it begins in the present and moves back
through the writings of some of the key Church Fathers: Walter
Rauschenbush, John Wesley, Martin Luther and on back through Aquinas
to Augustine. The course in local congregation dynamics includes
a number of workshops on organizational method and theory. Another
course of special interest has been world religions because of
its organization around the 'URimage' concept. Simply understood,
the URimage provides a way of focusing the key elements
in the life styles of the several major racial and cultural groups
of the world.
Each cultural curriculum course is an effort to get a grasp of
the dynamics of cultural change which characterize our era. They
progress from the individual, seen as the smallest cultural entity,
to the larger social groupings. For example, there are courses
in the individual and the Family, the Community and Polis, and
the Nation and the World. In another course, Psychology and Art
are the categories used to interpret the role of the individual
in modern life, and Sociology and History deal directly with social
dynamics per se. There are three major cultural shifts which are
dealt with: the emergence of the 'scientific world view' as the
new common sense, the shift to urbanization as the key to cultural
style, and the emergence of the contemporary secular mood.
The primary value of ail of these courses is not that they convey
new information, although they very well may. Their chief value,
however, should be understood as that of drawing together a confusing
welter of almost common cultural and theological insights into
a unified picture, or gestalt. It is not the purpose of these
courses to impose any particular set of views on anyone. But they
do present a firm stance and an interpretation of the ongoing
events of our time which can enable others to crystallize and
mature their own thinking.
In general, the thought which has arisen from the work of The Ecumenical Institute aims at a quality of inclusiveness and comprehensiveness which seeks to place all decision-making in a universal context. This is based on the conviction that parochial thought is no longer safe, much less productive or creative, for example, in the current racial conflict or in national policy. For most of us this again is selfevident. But old habits of thought are strong, and the Institute has attempted to develop a framework of thought that can aid in developing alternative habits.
The process by which the new habits of thought are presented for
testing is called 'Imaginal Education'. The understanding which
this term represents has a very long history, but it remained
for The Ecumenical Institute to name it and refine its use for
application for both general education, and for theological education
in particular. Actually, it does systematically what every good
teacher knows to do instinctively. It simply draws together each
discipline in a series of mental pictures, or 'images', rather
than through a set of abstract constructs. Near parallels to this
approach can be found in the literature of educational psychology,
but particularly striking has been the work of Arthur Koestler
and the anthology assembled by Brewster Ghiselin, as well as Kenneth
Boulding in the area of the psychology of the creative process.
All of these point to the conviction that genuine creative thought
occurs most readily on the level of mental image formation. To
this we have the direct testimony of men of such undoubted but
diverse talents as Einstein, Henri Poincare and Henry James. Through
the method referred to as 'Imaginal Education' Institute courses
make it possible for an individual, if he so chooses, to take
a new kind of relationship to his own selfimage, and to
others and to the world at large. It is intended to stimulate
the kind of double reflection which makes it possible for a person
not only to know, "but to know that he knows what he knows".
For phenomenologically, it is through the 'image' that the individual
and his world find their meeting Point.
The process of imaginal education itself is essentially that of
progressively deepening the students' sensitivity and awareness
to his world. The whole process can be illustrated through the
meal conversations and the discussions of contemporary art forms.
It begins first by eliciting the most transient kinds of mental
images (e.g., "Quickly now, what comes to mind when you hear
the word 'vocation'? ). The point here is to get out thought associations,
not definitions. The next step is the concretization of these
images in some specific life situation. ("Now where, other
than in this painting, have you seen this activity going on?").
Here the individual reflects upon the relationship between himself
and his world. The third step is to evoke a decisional response
to the student's actual life situation as it is perceived in the
subject of the conversation or in the art form. ("What bit
of crucial advice would you have given to Mr. Jones in this play?").
The same progression is followed in the combination of the lectures
and the seminars. The lectures evoke the images, and the seminars
press the reflection and interpretation.
When analyzed into components, the process sounds simple. But
the kinds of sensitivity which make it possible for a group to
move in this way are not easy in coming, and the number who are
considered qualified to teach the full range of courses grows
very slowly. Despite the rapid increase in the size of the program,
the emphasis continues to be upon the quality of teaching, even
when it must come at the expense of severely burdening the most
able members of the faculty. Programs are now underway to train
teachers on a regional basis. The oneyear internship program
is perhaps the most thorough and effective method, but in terms
of numbers the one month parish training program in July is perhaps
the most productive.
Participants are often impressed and intrigued by the Institute
emphasis upon team teaching. There are no specialists in one or
another aspect of the curriculum. Every teacher is expected to
be able to pick up any teaching task, or any role necessary with
the teaching team.
The course content is under constant evaluation. Each teaching
team does its own evaluation of each course after hours, and at
the end of the quarter the entire Institute teaching staff gathers
for an overall evaluation. Sensitivities are plumbed to discover
new cutting edges to the curriculum. Emphases are shifted during
this time, and new papers are introduced into the curriculum.
While the structures remain essentially fixed, each teacher has
his own distinctive technique in the application of his methodological
tools. Throughout the entire curriculum, and through each individual
course, the emphasis is upon the integrity of the whole.
The intention of the 5th City project in community reformulation is the development of a practical operating model as a demonstration of what serious, responsible and significant mission for the local congregation could be. Perhaps it would be well here to make the observation that has been made many times before, that as distinct from government or business, the objective of the Church is to work itself out of job. Only with this objective clearly in view is it possible to say that the Church exists for the sake of the world and not for its own sake. When this principle has been forgotten, the Church has frequently succeeded only in building an expanding clientele of dependent halfhuman beings. Despite misfortunes in theological understanding, the basic criticism of the Church offered by Sigmund Freud at this point is difficult to refute. It may be common currency among the theological unsophisticated to disregard any concept of eschatology, but, finally, what more could it mean for the Church to live eschatologically than that it live for the time when there is no mission for the Church? At any rate, this perspective on the task of the Church is fundamental to understanding the operation of the 5th City project.
This does not mean moving into an area, creating a temporary hope
and then leaving. Inner city ghettoes have seen too much of this,
as have many of those who have been the 'harvest' of the 19th
century missionary efforts. Nor does it mean the temporary alleviation
of even real human needs. The 'cup of cold water' is never to
be despised, nor is the quality of the act of the Good Samaritan.
But in a world capable of caring for the basic needs of its entire
population if only it would direct its technical resources in
this direction, justification of activity on the 'cup of cold
water' principle is often beside the point. Instead, what is needed
is the creating and shaping of new social structures to enable
the dispossessed to care for their own needs. For when this happens,
they are no longer dispossessed. Neither patronization nor bureaucratic
efficiency is any substitute for the basic sense of human dignity
that comes from caring for one's own needs, individually and as
part of a community.
The 5th City project is built upon five basic presuppositions
which developed out of the corporate struggle to find a realistic
starting point to begin work. To give the fullest possible description
of the project within the limitations of space, we need to state
each of the presuppositions, give the rationale for it, and describe
the most pertinent facets of the program. It will be helpful also
to explain that there are two fundamental aspects to the project.
The first is the task of building the actual sense of community
identity. The second task is building the structures which will
provide or channel in the necessary community services. The first
is to a large degree dependent upon the concept of imaginal education,
which has been briefly discussed earlier. The second is fundamentally
the job of hardheaded community organization.
By way of introduction, a word should be said about models and model building. This is a skill which is taught in each of the practice courses in both the theological and the cultural curriculum, but it was not mentioned earlier because its application is most visible in the work of 5th City. Still it is a significant part of all the work of The Ecumenical Institute. Model building is the task of developing the short and long range constructs for action programming. It is applied not only to individual concerns, but also to the entire range of concerns which move out from the individual in concentric circles the family, the local community, the nation and finally the entire human community. Procedurally, it involves the development of the series of charts which contain all the relevant information pertaining to the objective or the whole complex of objectives to be accomplished. It includes timelines, problem analyses, the format of the various organizational structures to be built, the type and source of the various resources to be employed, and is integrally related to the administrative concept of system analysis. It should also be said that model building is ideally suitable as a methodology for corporate planning, for it is capable of drawing together the contributions and insights of many minds into a related composite whole.
Sometimes one encounters a kind of romantic opposition to the
whole concept of model building, particularly when it is related
to private life and personal concerns. Often it stems from what
might be called a 'Christmas tree psychology' usually learned
in childhood, which would rather operate on the naive assumption
that the future will always work out for the best if only you
leave it alone. This attitude probably does little harm as a private
assumption. But when it makes itself evident on the national or
metropolitan level, even the level of the family, its results
can often be tragicwitness, for example, the phenomenon
known as 'urban sprawl', or the very existence of slum ghettoes
itself. Building models for the future of mankind is neither a
matter of arrogance nor humility, of selfish conceit nor faithful
trust in the future. Humility and trust come after the decisions
have been made.
5th City is built upon a model which is the product of three years
of work by Institute staff and faculty. It is both systematic
and comprehensive. Not only does it indicate the direction in
which work must move, but it helps maintain balance in the allocation
of personnel and resources. And it effectively blocks arbitrary
decisions made on the basis of either expediency or romanticism.
The categories used in the model are often highly abstract and
sometimes obscure. This too is intentional, for it is an obvious
fact that the formulation of a problem tends to predetermine the
solution. Therefore, if the categories are conventional, so also
will be the solutions. This is no problem if the conventional
solutions work. However, it is clear that they have not in the
slums and ghettoes of American cities.
Let us proceed now to the five operating presuppositions of the
5th City program and the description of the program itself.
PRESUPPOSITION 1: A community reformulation project must be
conducted in a limited geographical area.
The sixteenblock 5th City area was deliberately chosen as
the site for the reformulation after a full year of research and
careful exploration of Chicago's slum ghettoes. The Institute
staff was clear from the first that the project had to be conducted
within a limited and clearly defined geographical area. Resources
of money and personnel were in short supply from the first. This
had necessarily to be the case, for even the most outstanding
success in the endeavor would be of small use if excessive cost
made duplication elsewhere impossible. But this fact meant that
an area much larger than 5th City's population of 4560 people
was prohibitive.
'a critical part of the project program was the building of
a strong sense of community identity and pride'
A number of other factors entered into the selection of the area.
One was that a comparatively small amount of the land was taken
up by industrial or institutional use. Another was that the housing,
while in a state of serious decay, was fundamentally sound in
its original construction. Together, these two things meant that
the fate of the community was not as likely to be altered in the
near future by extraneous developments, such as industrial expansion
or total demolition for urban renewal by the city. Another important
initial item was the relative absence in the area of other social
or welfare services. That meant fewer political complications
due to any real or imagined infringement upon the functions of
other agencies. It also meant that evaluation of the project,
successful or not, would be more definitive.
We have said that a critical part of the project program was the
building of a strong sense of community identity and pride. In
the first instance, that identity must be geographical identity.
In order for this to develop, the area must have clear operating
boundaries. Major thoroughfares bound 5th City on the East (Kedzie
Avenue) and on the south (the Eisenhower Expressway). A major
city park, including a low income highrise apartment building,
serves as the western limit, and on the north, is the 5th Avenue
diagonal street.
Everyone who has had any experience in building anything from
stores to churches knows the powerful effect these boundaries
can have in shaping the flow of traffic and personal relationships
within an area. This tends to be true, even if the boundaries
are not recognized consciously as such by the inhabitants, even
as they honor them.
Yet even a population of 4560 cannot understand itself without
further subdivision. In the fall of 1966, 5th City was divided
into five subdivisions called 'stakes'. Again, the boundaries
of the stakes were determined by thoroughfares because the concern
was to develop neighborhood units, not arbitrary population distributions.
The stakes provide an organizational base from which the leadership
can be recruited, individual needs and concerns learned, and program
and service information distributed. Akin to the nature of block
clubs, stakes enable the penetration of the community and the
caring for the needs of its inhabitants. The first intention was
to develop a hard core of leadership of perhaps twenty people
in each stake. By Spring 1967, however, attendance at stake meetings
had jumped considerably, and it became clear that the number of
stakes would have to be doubled if the job was to be done adequately.
This was done, and 5th City now operates with ten stake units
which meet weekly for planning and regular houseto-house
visitation. While originally it was necessary for pairs of staff
members to do all of the calling, it soon became possible to pair
off staff and residents in teams. Now much of the calling is done
entirely by residents in informal fashion as should be the case.
Plans call for a considerable expansion of the 5th City area in
the near future, once structural machinery for the present area
is in full operation. An optimum size for such urban subcommunities
has been suggested of between twenty and twentyfive thousand,
although this is by no means an official decision. But at least
this figure would provide a sound financial base for the operation
of practically any kinds of services and the geographical area,
considering normal urban population density, would still be manageable.
Plans for this development are far from completion, however, and
are dependent upon a ureas many factors.
'stakes enable the penetration of the community and the caring
for the needs of its inhabitants'
The next two basic presuppositions are closely related to the
task of developing a self-conscious community identity. We shall
therefore save further comment on program development until these
have been set forth.
PRESUPPOSITION 2: Community reformulation must deal with the
depth human problem to be found in the area.
In the specific situation of an American Negro urban ghetto, the
'depth human problem' is what might be referred to as the selfreinforcing
negative selfimage of the Negro, or the 'victim image' for
short. This is a very generalized statement, of course, and is
subject to all the criticisms of any generalization, but the concept
is one that has been referred to many times in many ways by such
scholars as Lerome Bennett and Langston Hughes. A condensed, welldocumented
statement of the problem can also be found in the April 1967 issue
of the "Scientific American" in an article written by
James P. Comer of Yale. A brief quotation from this article which
points both to some of the roots and some of the results of the
problem follows:
"The Negro experience has been very different. . . (from
that of white minorities in America). The traumatic effects of
separation from Africa, slavery and the denial of political and
economic opportunities after the abolition of slavery created
divisive psychological and social forces in the Negro community.
Coordinated group action, which was certainly appropriate for
a despised minority, has been too little evident: Negroes have
seldom moved cohesively and effectively against discrimination
and exploitation. These abuses led to the creation of an impoverished,
undereducated and alienated group a sizable minority among
Negroes, disproportionately large compared with other ethnic groups.
This troubled minority has a selfdefeating 'style' of life
that leads to repeated failure; and its plight and its reaction
to that plight are at the core of the continuing racial conflict
in the U. S. Only a meaningful and powefful Negro community can
help members of this group realize their potential, and thus alleviate
racial unrest. "
'the depth human problem is... the selfreinforcing negative
self-image of the Negro, the 'victim image'
Such is the quality of life in Chicago's West Side ghettoes in
general, and in 5th City in particular. The subtle and overt expression
of the 'victim image' are infinite in number. Clearly, the process
of building authentic community identity must take this into consideration
as a major factor. This moves into the next basic presupposition
which is at once a key to the accomplishment of the task and something
of a problem in itself.
PRESUPPOSITION 3: The key to the Identity building phase of
community reformulation is the intentional use of symbols.
Every national, religious, ideological, racial or cultural movement that has ever deeply involved the hearts and minds of any substantial number of people has been deeply dependent upon the intentional use of symbols. This is just as true of the industrial revolution and the labor movement which have shaped our American life as it is of any communist or socialist enterprises. And although the difference between signs and symbols shades off at many points, it is evident all around us that specialists in the science of marketing have been quite selfconscious about the use of both. Symbols, then, are a part of everyone's life, whether they point to the emergence of the Cuban revolution or whether they point to the 'good life'. For example, in the last decade, the Negro freedom movement has made a most effective use of symbols.
Obviously, there are many types of symbols. Roughly divided into
the categories of myth, rite and visual symbol, they include stories
about individuals, peoples or nations, songs and the like. A rite
can refer to anything from merely a habitual activity or way of
doing things to a carefully written choric response for the opening
and closing of meetings, or quasicultic t practices. Visual
symbols are simply flags, insignia or documents. The 5th City
project has made use of all of these at one time or another. All
of these symbols have in common that they are pointing, beyond
themselves, to some conviction or decision about the style of
life of the person who relates to them. In 5th City, they point
to the fact of pride in being a 'Black' or Negro human being.
They point to pride in community identity. And they point to the
conviction of the necessity of assuming responsibility for the
lives of the residents themselves and for their neighbors.
'5th City Festivals... combining all the arts... anticipated
for weeks by community residents'
As is already evident, the relationship between the use of symbols
and the process of 'imaginal education' is very close. While imaginal
education is used to evoke conceptions of a changed and expanded
life style, the symbols operate to embody those possibilities
and fix them in memory. On the level of community identity development,
symbols operate in a way which is probably most closely akin to
their use in marketing practices. Without these symbols, there
could be no community.1
The development of community identity has made use of the following
'instruments' or tools, each of which involves the symbolic understanding
in one way or another. The Negro heritage education program is
a study course focusing on key events in the history of the Negro
people as a people, as opposed to the usual emphasis on particular
individuals. It is largely concerned with the actual but positive
interpretation of the whole tragic series of events connected
with slavery and the struggle for complete freedom in the midst
of the White culture. Most of this story has previously been told
romantically out of a fundamentally negative perspective. 5th
City Festivals have been part of this effort combining all the
arts in a program performed by outside talents as well as community
residents. Attendance usually numbers around 1000 or more, and
has
1"'This is the great function of symbols to
point beyond themselves, in the power of that to which they point,
to open up levels of reality which otherwise are closed, and to
open up levels of the human mind of which we otherwise are not
aware. " (Paul Tillich, Theology and Symbolism in Religious
Symbolism' edited F. Ernest Johnson, New York, 1955, pp. 10716,
p. 109).
been anticipated for weeks by community residents. Community symbols
proper include the wearing of the black beret with appropriate
5th City insignia at all community functions. The 5th City emblem,
a red wedge shape with blunted tip set on a black circle representing
the world, is printed on all materials distributed in the community
such as the community newspaper or tracts distributed by the information
service. Opening and closing rituals expressing the intention
of the reformulation project ere used at all public meetings as
are several specially written songs. Dramatic activity can serve
many functions other than entertainment. They provide vicarious
emotional expression, as well as the opportunity to 'try on' new
roles and styles in a safe, neutral situation. The Community Forum
is responsible for introducing the community to Negro leaders
of many kinds. For the power that particular individuals have
had in the last decade is clearly a matter of highly symbolic
dimensions.
The first three basic presuppositions (limited geographical area,
dealing with the depth human problem and the use of symbols) are
all directly related to the task of building community identity.
The last two presuppositions are more directly concerned with
the building of a program of combined community services.
PRESUPPOSITION 4: Community reformulation must deal with all
of the critical problems of a community simultaneously.
Of all of the five basic presuppositions, this one perhaps sounds
the most presumptuous. Actually, it is quite elemental. It is
well known that ghetto problems are the sort that reinforces one
another, somewhat in the same way that the 'balance of nature',
or its imbalance for that matter, is selfreinforcing. Economists
in the field of international economic development presume this
principle (the complexity of achieving momentum) almost as second
nature, but it is rarely or only halfheartedly applied in
urban development. Yet everyone is clear how income limits education,
which limits job opportunities, which limits housing alternatives,
which negates selfrespect, which limits motivation, which
limits cultural developments, which limits family stability-and
so to limited education and on and on and on. All of the problems
interact upon one another in a complex matrix of criescross
relationships. All of which leads back to the initial point that
to deal relevantly with any particular ghetto problem it is necessary
to deal with all problems at once.
Only with this in mind is any problem analysis fruitful. The 5th
City model calls for three basic categories of problems: the economic,
the cultural, and the political. The economic problems are the
most selfevident, including housing, employment, consumer
education and health security. The political area is concerned
with the internal relationship of order for common life within
the immediate area, and the external relations with the wider
economic and political communities in the metropolitan area called
Chicago. Together this means community civil order, community
maintenance, voter education, practical education in the operation
of the city structures, human rights and civic responsibility.
The most complex and crucial of these three areas is the cultural.
The most subtle of the three, this is the area which blends the
'common sense' assumptions as to what life is all about into the
stance which defines 20th century man. In order to get at some
of these complexities, the category of culture was broken into
three subcategories: education, style and symbol.
Education is concerned primarily with providing ways to increase
the effect in depth of existing innercity schools, and with
providing supplementary programs. There is now in operation a
ninemonth program to enable adults to pass the high school
equivalency examinations, and a twoweek experimental program
on a very intensive level to accomplish the same end, but in less
depth. This latter is primarily a program in teaching examination
skills, rather than a serious educational venture. It enables
community people to qualify for jobs which they could have otherwise
fulfilled quite well but for the diploma requirements. Another
significant aspect of the education program has been the recruitment
of teachers from around the country to pick up the task of teaching
in the inner city. These teachers, who have become fully a part
of the corporate faculty of the Institute, work together over
the school year, struggling with the problems of curriculum upgrading.
Work has also been initiated which will supplement the schools'
efforts in gaining college admissions and scholarships for its
students. Perhaps the most important of these has been the work
on curriculum and teaching methodology. The inner city situation
requires extremely sophisticated methodologies in order to overcome
the motivational problems which stem from the Negro students'
negative selfimages referred to earlier.
'the economic problems are the most selfevident, including
housing, employment, consumer education and health security'
Other work in the field of education includes the third largest
preschool program operated with funds from the Chicago Committee
on Urban Opportunity with a full curriculum, including the teaching
of reading through the experimental use of the I.T.A. alphabet,
and the teaching of simple arithmetic using the device of Cuisinaire
rods. The MiniSchool program, in contrast to the usual babysitting,
is highly sophisticated. Following the lead of Jerome Kagan of
Harvard and William Kessen at Yale, this program has sought to
apply the latest findings in child development research, first
in a regular curriculum for children 21 days through one year,
then in a second program for one and twoyear olds.
The program in the area of Style has, to date been largely concerned
with the problem of the expansion of cultural horizons for all
age levels within the 5th City area. It has been the staff assigned
to the area of style which has been largely responsible for the
development of the afterschool programs for the elementary
age children, as well as work with the neighborhood gang structures.
Perhaps the most dramatic effort made in this direction, so far
as the residents have been concerned, has been a series of trips
taken to cities around the nation: Detroit, New Orleans, New York,
Washington, D.C. and most recently to visit Expo '67.
In the area of Symbols, the staff has been involved not only with
developing the types and uses of community symbols, it has also
been responsible for the remarkable success of the quarterly festivals.
A community arts program is now underway as well in both
the plastic arts and the performing arts.
5th City now has in operation some 24 component programs. Some
of these are in the nature of shortterm programs to alleviate
problems of an immediate and pressing nature. Other programs will
be expanded, and new programs will be added. With each existing
program there is set up, paralleling it, a 'Guild' program, which
is specifically designed to train leadership and cultivate local
talent to take over staff functions. Some of the programs, particularly
those in the area of education, are well on the way toward the
point when they will be totally controlled by indigenous residents.
Other guild programs require more detailed technical training
and will be longer in maturing, But the end product of a 5th City
community structure, completely operated by permanent Residents
of the area, is never to be lost sight of.
The fifth and last of the five presuppositions has already been
mentioned implicitly. It Remains only to be specifically named.
PRESUPPOSITION 5: Community Reformulation must deal with all
age levels in the community.
The rationale for this presupposition is quite similar to that
for the previous one. Just as community problems tend to reinforce
one another, so the attitudes of the various age levels within
a community tend to reinforce one another.
5th City now has in operation a full program for every age level.
At this writing, the youngest participant in a 5th City program
is 35 days old, the eldest is 87, and a resident of the Garfield
apartments, the Chicago Housing Authority 17story highrise
for the elder citizens of the community. The program for the elder
residents has been perhaps one of the most exiting of the accomplishments
in 5th City. Not content with being passive participants, the
elders are now teaching a five session course in Negro history
and heritage in the public school system itself. Its reception
was excellent, and the program has now been extended to other
groups outside the immediate area.
Before closing the discussion of the 5th City project in community
reformulation, a word should be said explicitly about the nature
of leadership training in the project. This can best be summarized
under three principal assumptions.
The first assumption is that the Negro ghetto situation contains
a high number of persons of natural leadership. This has been
verified by the 5th City experience as well as the experience
of other kinds of community organization. Ghetto concentration
tends to provide leaders as in any community.
Secondly, any leadership learns by doing. And the one critical
leadership quality, the willingness to make a decision and stand
by it, is learned in the actual process of decisionmaking.
Formal leadership training is primarily for the sake of developing
the quality of judgment and the selfconsciousness that judging
comprehensively is good leadership rather than creating leadership
itself.
Finally, the 5th City staff is convinced that the most adequate
method of decisionmaking r__ for local community organizations
is that of consensus. It enables full participation by all persons.
and it allows new leadership to emerge at any point in the growth
of the organization. In the early stages of development, it has
the additional advantage of allowing project staff to move in
effectively whenever necessary, without engaging in a direct power
struggle which would prove discouraging to ultrasensitive
new leaders.
The stakes, or geographical subdivisions, are the primary training
ground for new leadership. We have already referred to the importance
of the guild structures. In addition, each month there is a meeting
of the presidium. The presidium is a name borrowed from Roman
military practice, and here it designates the meeting of the key
stake leaders for planning and policy determination. Here they
are also informed of any significant intra or extracommunity
developments. These programs have taken on considerable importance
in the last several months, and are due to become even more so
in the very near future.
On a thirteenweek quarter, there is also the Community Congress,
which is somewhat akin to the New England town meeting of earlier
days. Among other things, this time provides the opportunity for
a recapitulation of the previous quarter's activities, and for
a public recognition of emerging community leaders. At this meeting,
stake members and their families are invited to attend, along
with guild leaders and educational program participants.
It remains only to describe something of the corporate life of
The Ecumenical Institute: Chicago. Before anything else is said
about the corporate body, it must be understood that it is functional.
Romantic or mystical notions about the nature of community notwithstanding,
it would not exist if it were not functional. The community gains
its power from the task which it is intended to accomplish, and
not the other way around. Like military life, no rational person
would tolerate the pressures, the impingement on privacy or the
perpetual restraints on personal will were it not for a strong
sense of commitment to the necessity of the mission.
When this is clear, it must be added that there is a great deal
about the life of the community which is both delightful and fascinating.
It is an organic thing, and like anything alive, it has its own
moods, its own inimitable peculiarities and its own special ways
of expressing that life. And above all, it has its own distinct
rhythm which can only be felt after living with it for awhile.
For instance, much of this can be understood in relation to the
worship life of the community. In both a literal and a figurative
sense, the morning office is the community heartbeat. Each morning
at 6:15, six days a week, the community gathers to participate
in worship. Sooner or later, everyone in the community takes on
the role of the liturgist on behalf of the whole body. Of all
the facets of the life and activity of the Ecumenical Institute,
the liturgy is the thing which probably changes most slowly and
most rarely. After all, even the most skilled surgeon does not
operate on the human heart except with a sense of the most grave
responsibility. And yet, despite fixed quality, the liturgy is
never mechanical. One can literally feel the life of the community
through the rhythm and volume and tone of the choric responses.
If there is a special problem in the community, one does not have
to be told of it to sense it. Nor does one need to be told if
there is a special cause for celebration. There is, at the end
of the corporate office, a rite known as the passing of the peace.
This is performed to the accompaniment of a kind of rhythmic dance
in which everyone participates, either by hand clapping, foot
stamping or beating a rhythm on the backs of pews or chairs. It
is this which is most sensitive to the mood of the community.
Strangely, it is never the same two mornings of the year. Sometimes
it has the quality of an exhausted chain gang work beat. At other
times, it truly has the quality of a dance building to a victorious
crescendo.
Nor is the rhythm of the worship indicative only of the corporate
mood. It is understood throughout the community that ail of its
members are to be present each morning, save with the exception
of illness. Consequently, absence is to be interpreted as a kind
of temporary excommunication. And thus presence or absence at
the worship also becomes an expression of an individual's sense
of harmony or displacement in the group, whether the absence is
intentional or 'accidental'.
If the heart beat of the community is its Daily Office, perhaps
it could be said that its backbone is the corporate discipline.
It should probably be said at the outset that there is no discipline
in the conventional sense of the word. For the Church is the community
of people who have chosen of their own free will to surrender
their lives for the sake of humanity, created and loved by God.
The word discipline always carries with it the implied ultimate
threat of force. In the Church, the ultimate threat has always
been, and always will be, the threat of excommunication from the
group. One simply does not intimidate a man who has committed
his life to crucifixion. And yet there is no other word than discipline,
finally, to express the relationship which exists between the
individual and the corporate will. At any rate, difficult as it
may be to express, at least the following elements are understood
as essential to the continuance of the corporate life: attendance
at worship, at the ceremonial daily breakfast meal and Sunday
evening meal, participation in the decisionmaking process
which determines corporate policy, and the acceptance of any assignment
designated as necessary for the mission or the life of the community
by the corporate body or its appointed representatives. There
are many other points of greater or lesser significance, but these
at least are crucial. Without them, the community could not truly
be a community.
The administrative structures for the operation of the Order and
the operation of the programs of The Ecumenical Institute are
separate. The Order maintains the three traditional categories
of the Elders, the Catechumens and the Novitiates, or the Permanent
House Church or Confreres, the Fellows, and the interns.
Within the Order, it is the members of the Permanent House Church
and the Fellows who take the responsibility for the major policy
decisions. The opinions and insights of the interns, on the other
hand, are always honored, but they do not finally make the decisions.
In the actual operation of The Ecumenical Institute administration,
however, it is often impossible to distinguish newcomers from
old hands. Assignment of responsibility is made strictly on the
basis of demonstrated competence and the willingness of the individual
to assume major responsibility.
Decisionmaking is always by consensus. Leadership falls
to those who are most able to express the group consensus. It
has been suggested from many quarters that consensus is not efficient.
But it is usually the case that time spent haggling over seemingly
minor points is really but a way of getting at the deeper, underlying
issues involved in making a decision. Often, had these discussions
been cut off by an arbitrary vote, the deeper issues would never
have come to light. There is also the other point, that consensus
is really the only possible method capable of evoking the wholehearted
support and education of all members of a group. For once the
consensus has been made, no one can claim that he did not have
his chance to present his own alternate plans. Perhaps, finally,
consensus decisionmaking is not efficient. But if a distinction
can be made between efficiency and effectiveness, the experience
of The Ecumenical Institute has certainly demonstrated its effectiveness
many times under many circumstances. There are inequities, of
course, for groups are not more immune than individuals to the
possibility of acting unjustly. But again, if the criterion for
value is effective functionally, the method of consensus will
continue to be the rule.
If there is anything mysterious or mystical about the life of
a corporate body, certainly it becomes evident in the exercise
of what is called the 'corporate mind.' An individual can find
his power seemingly infinitely extended once he has learned at
least to some extent to be responsive to it. Though at times the
reverse can be true, more often than not the 'corporate mind'
shows an instinct for the possible which would seemingly contradict
all rules of logic. That seven families could develop a national
education program that literally spans the nation and the world
out of literally nothing is an absurdity. Yet it has happened.
That twenty individuals working full time could build a community
organization where agencies with ample resources had often failed
is likewise an absurdity, but it has happened. And all of it has
come about as the result of a thousand miracles, no less astonishing
for their comparative importance in the total picture. Festivals
for thousands, world teaching tours, stand side by side with what
is literally a handtomouth financial situation.
In fact, it has been in the handling of its economic life that
the Order has demonstrated in a concrete way, some of the special
possibilities of corporate living. Once it could be said that
"two could live as cheaply as one", That may not be
true any longer, but the existence of The Ecumenical Institute
stands as a witness to the fact that, if they are willing to combine
resources, 200 can live as cheaply as 100-and if they are willing
to do without a few frills. It is the understanding of all who
join the Order that each family is to maintain itself economically
within the life of the community. That means that one member of
the family, husband or wife, must earn enough money to sustain
the others. Perhaps one goes to work each morning down in Chicago's
'Loop' and his or her remaining 12 hours are poured into the direct
mission effort after paid hours are finished. Or perhaps a Government
contract pays the salary of the wife as a preschool teacher,
so that she is able to work directly in the mission program. Whatever
the arrangement, all salaries are paid directly into the Order
account, and out of that each family is paid a salary on a scale
based upon the number end age of the children. Food and housing
are handled corporately in a similar manner. Wholesale buying
of household supplies, group health insurance and corporate ownership
of a tiny fleet of automobiles for business purposes are other
examples of the ways in which needs can be cared for. The standards
of economic wellbeing in the Order are not typical of the
dream of the 'good life', which many hold dear. But what is important
from the standpoint of the missional community is that individual
and family needs are cared for, with a maximum of efficiency.
This means that all income which comes to the Institute, whether
in donations, pledges, foundation gifts, or other, are poured
directly into the program operation, for the faculty is essentially
selfsustaining. And that in itself may provide a vision
of future possibility for many in the modern church who are perplexed
about securing support for critical needs in their communities.
Is the disciplined corporate life the answer to all of the Church's
problems? Hardly. But it is a viable approach to dealing with
many of them. Can divine sanction or eternal verity be claimed
for it? Hardly. Participation is a decisional matter-that and
nothing more. How long will this community called The Ecumenical
Institute: Chicago last? No one knows. But all those who are part
of it understand that the time will come when it will have to
be replaced or destroyed. But by then it will be history. And
history has its own judgment and its own justification. Some would
call it the 'Will of God.'