Spirituality
And Appropriate Technology
A ministery of practical love
that is teaching simple self-help skills and tools
by Jim Allen
One of the articles in Earth & Spirit (IC#24) Late Winter 1990, Page 7
Copyright (c)1990, 1997 by Context Institute
| To order this issue ...
At a training institute for Christian missionaries in central Alabama,
students
spend the morning in classroom study, then go outdoors after lunch to practice
what they've learned. But what they do doesn't look like missionary work
or Gospel preaching in the conventional sense. They work in the dirt, using
hoes they've made for themselves in the institute workshop from worn-out
harrow disks, building deep-mulched vegetable planting beds on what was
formerly a weedy and eroding red-clay hillside.
This segment of their training is a two-week intensive Permaculture course,
and the transformation of this damaged and abandoned quarter-acre into a
model of community-scale sustainable agriculture is typical of the kind
of service these Christians believe the Gospel calls them to undertake.
Servants in Faith and Technology, SIFAT (or, alternatively, Southern
Institute for Appropriate Technology), was founded in 1979 as a non-profit,
ecumenical training and research institute by Methodist missioners Ken and
Sarah Corson, who had had extensive experience in working with the poor
in Cuba, Haiti and Bolivia. Early in their careers, the Corsons chose to
live among and at the same level as the people they were ministering to,
adopting a holistic, "incarnation evangelism." Says Ken, "As
God's love took physical form in Christ, so must we, as followers, incarnate
the Gospel, put love into physical action and practice, not merely preach
it."
For the Corsons, the realization grew that the most appropriate form
their practical love could take was appropriate technology - simple self-help
skills and tools the suffering and oppressed poor of the Third World could
use to shake off dependency and regain for themselves the dignity and
wholeness
of healthy lives. An important aspect of this choice was recognition that
high technology, and the kind of "development" usually envisioned
for Third World peoples by what Sarah calls "Americanized
Christianity,"
were too often powered by greed and resulted in the pollution and destruction
of the Earth.
The Corsons believed that following the Gospel had to include being
responsible
stewards of God's creation. In Sarah's view, "The abundant life we
seek and are promised begins with the healing of our relationships - between
us and God, between us and other people, and between us and nature."
Finding that resources and training opportunities for such a ministry
were very limited, the Corsons gathered support from friends and church
workers at home, and launched SIFAT to fill the need. From small beginnings,
the facility has grown to include a 105-acre farm used as a research, training
and demonstration center, and a staff of about 20, many with Ph.D.s in
technical
fields and all with Third World experience.
In addition to sustainable agriculture techniques, appropriate technologies
developed and demonstrated at SIFAT include solar, wind, biomass and pedal
power; rammed-earth and ferrocement construction; water lifting and
purification;
and improved latrine construction. Emphasis is on low-cost methods using
available materials, and students get extensive hands-on experience. The
Permaculture garden, for example, is irrigated from a student- and staff-built
ferrocement tank filled with water pumped from the nearby creek by a
student-and
staff-built hydroram pump.
All training and research at SIFAT stress individual, community and global
interrelationships, and the ethical and ecological consequences of
technologies
and lifestyles, so that students acquire both appropriate technical expertise
and sensitivity to larger issues. Committed to practicing what they preach,
SIFAT staff adopt a voluntarily simple lifestyle, though many could command
well-paid positions in mainstream institutions. The extensive cross-cultural
training they provide moves students in the same direction. Students spend
one weekend, for example, living in a typical Third World jungle village
constructed at SIFAT, learning both the ways life can be maintained and
the ways social and economic injustice are typically structured into such
a village.
Hundreds of graduates have taken SIFAT's idea of incarnation evangelism
- the spirituality of appropriate technology - into over 30 Third World
countries. As an institution, SIFAT certainly isn't yet perfected: the SIFAT
garden hasn't entirely driven supermarket food from the dining hall, for
example. And at times, discussion of both theological and technological
issues takes on an aroma more of doctrinal than spiritual concern. Still,
SIFAT serves as a remarkable demonstration of an encompassing Christian
spirituality in action, a doing of love directed toward the healing of our
hurting Earth.
For more information, contact SIFAT, Rt 1 Box D-14, Lineville, AL
36266, (205) 396-2017. Writer Jim Allen resigned his university faculty
position on April Fool's Day, 1985, in order to pursue more rewarding work.
He is a member of Vine & Fig Tree, a land-based peace/justice activism
community in southeast Alabama.
Please support
this web site ... and thanks if you already are!
All contents copyright (c)1990,
1997 by Context Institute
Please send comments to webmaster
Last Updated 29 June 2000.
URL: http://www.context.org/ICLIB/IC24/Allen.htm
Home | Search
| Index of Issues | Table
of Contents
|