ABSTRACT Tragedies can potentially betray some of our true colours. The COVID-19 pandemic has created a unique pastoral matrix and dynamic. This has had significant implications on the expression of… Click to show full abstract
ABSTRACT Tragedies can potentially betray some of our true colours. The COVID-19 pandemic has created a unique pastoral matrix and dynamic. This has had significant implications on the expression of congregants’ identities and frames of meaning-making. The usually gathered congregation was disoriented, traumatised, as well as physically ‘scattered’ and ‘disembedded’ during the lockdown season. This dynamic has enabled me to have a fresh appreciation of my research into discipleship in a Reformed congregation, where I am the ordained minister. I had carried out a congregational study on evangelistic discipleship before the pandemic. I have used the disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic to reread four initial research assertions about discipleship: covenantal, gathered, vicarious, and pragmatic. This re-reading is anchored on five pastoral observations, regarding isolation, fellowship, gifts/ skills, prayer, and the human–Divine relationship. This revision of data analysis has re-clothed, nuanced and expanded my initial data interpretation. The ethnographic approach acted like a pair of fresh eyes and a critical friend. It has enabled me to reread ordinary identities in extraordinary circumstances.
               
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