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11 - Blackshawhead: a local case history in rural church categorization

from PART 4 - HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES

Lewis Burton
Affiliation:
Glyndŵr University
Leslie J. Francis
Affiliation:
University of Warwick
Mandy Robbins
Affiliation:
University of Warwick
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Summary

Abstract – A number of studies have sought to categorize churches according to their location in situations which can be said to be rural or urban, or some mix of each of these two types of settlement patterns. Such categorization has uncertainties, and the attempts to refine systems sometimes give rise to debate about the criteria to be used, and to contradictions between the resulting scales suggested by different studies. This article seeks to question existing criteria and systems of categorization by using a local church's experience as a case history, and also to point up other issues related to small church experience in an isolated situation. It also seeks to draw attention to the value of the study of the local church for more general issues in rural theology.

What is rural?

A recent publication, Sowing the Seed by the Churches' Regional Commission for Yorkshire and the Humber (2003), describes its area of rural concern as ‘not only the vast rural tracts of North Yorkshire, the Dales and the North York Moors, but also the Wolds of the East Riding; west of Halifax to Todmorden, and north toward Keighley; south and east of Huddersfield’ and so on. In the text which follows, however, it describes Christian initiatives for neighbourhood communities only in the well cultivated and fertile parts of the region and has nothing to say about the rolling vast areas of moorland where nothing grows except rough grass and heather, and which is populated only by sheep and the occasional isolated farm.

Type
Chapter
Information
Rural Life and Rural Church
Theological and Empirical Perspectives
, pp. 120 - 130
Publisher: Acumen Publishing
Print publication year: 2012

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