In 2021 the Vatican launched a unique global theology project: Doing Theology from the Existential Peripheries. What can we learn from those
The church is called to come out of herself and to go to the peripheries, not only geographically, but also the existential peripheries: the mystery of sin, of pain, of injustice, of ignorance and indifference to religion, of intellectual currents and of all misery.
With this opening quote from Pope Francis my colleague, Dr. Meghan Clark, shares her work in this American magazine article. As part of the North American Working Group for the Vatican’s Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development Dr. Clark was tasked with a research project for the synodal process. The research consisted of going out to the “existential peripheries” in order to capture the voices of marginalized groups and their responses to the synodal questions.
In this article you will see how Dr. Clark, a recognized expert within the Catholic social tradition, incorporates the recent teachings of Pope Francis to set the context for this project. With a certain academic humility (not always found in the hallowed halls of academia) she knew where to look to help find the "existential peripheries" in North America and also to find those who journey with and have come to relate with these communities.
That is perhaps why I chose to enter the field of social ministry, if my research and service was going to be with the people of God who were socially marginalized then I felt that I needed to be present in order to minister to their social needs. With the asylee and refugee communities I have been able to capture many of their stories which, for me, captures the richness of lo cotidiano, the lived context for why this community is here and how they got here. This was the meta-narrative that I used in a recent engagement with a conservative Catholic banker who wanted to know why our Church feels called to welcome drug dealers and rapist. Evidently this person has bought into an opposing political narrative that is not actually based on the encounter with this targetted population. My counter to her narrative was to share the actual stories of those we serve.
I had the privilege to join Dr. Clark with the conversations that we had in Brooklyn and Queens. It was a very humbling experience. This for me is always the case, to receive someone's story is a sacred moment. That is what the culture of encounter is all about. When someone is willing to trust you with their story they are opening themselves to you, the listener. They are allowing themselves to be vulnerable to the other. This is a deeply intimate (and thus sacred) moment. That is moment that an authentic encounter occurs.
The stories that I heard during this process were stories of faith. This is a consistent message that is found with many who research the migrant communities. The theological findings that Latino Theologians like Virgil Elizondo or Roberto Goizueta captured in their respective books, "Galilean Journey" and "Caminamos con Jesus" is once again captured in this research.
Though I met those who felt abandoned by their fellow Christians or excluded by the Catholic Church, I encountered no one who felt abandoned by God. “When you have faith, anything is possible,” noted a young migrant mother from Guatemala. In Ciudad Juarez, I met migrant women from many places who all euphemistically referred to “difficulties” when mentioning the ubiquitous violence experienced on their journey. And yet I heard some version of the same assertion several times: “God hasn’t abandoned us because we are here.”
Their spirituality is an implicit recognition that God is with them in their journey. This is a guiding theological principle for this community. Although they may not have any formal Ignatian training the spiritual belief that one can find God in the encounters of every day life is certainly something that would resonate with the theist of this community. And even those who disown any formal religious/spiritual perspectives often are able to recognize blessings along the way. There is certainly much we can learn from the faith and spirituality that guides this community.
I am thrilled that the synod process was attentive to these voices. It is consistent with the teachings of Pope Francis and his call to promote a culture of encounter. It was an absolute privilege to be invited to assist in this process. Josefa's story and experience with the recycling community is one that I shall not forget.












