New Church Life November/ December 2015 | Page 41

    The Importance of New Church Content This history course contributes to Bryn Athyn College’s Human Society major, where one major theme is human choice, rooted in the first law of Divine providence: to act in freedom according to reason. Human beings are free to make choices about what to believe, how to act, and how to respond to their circumstances. Reacting games call attention to this point because they highlight that history did not have to unfold as it Dr. Wendy Closterman did. The events of the past were not pre-determined, but were shaped by the choices that people made within the circumstances and conditions in which they lived. While the students need to play their roles in historically appropriate ways, within these roles they w restle with decisions and make choices about what to do. They can – and sometimes do – create different outcomes than what happened historically because of how they understand, present and weigh the multiple considerations at play. For the course we have been conducting this term, two things have stood out for us: the civil and moral levels of life. Several places in the Writings suggest that our rational ability – the key human capacity to distinguish between good and evil – begins to be opened by means of civic truths, consideration of justice, governmental affairs, and what is fair and equitable. Our course on democracy obviously deals with these issues directly, but every Reacting game is set in an historic moment of crisis in which a decision must be made by a group, so no game can avoid having students wrestle with issues of justice and equity. Our rational ability is opened at the next level by moral truths – matters of personal life in social contexts and issues of virtue, like honesty. It is interesting that there is a whole chapter in Minds on Fire on “Inculcating Morality and Empathy.” The author makes the point that taking on a role forces students to consider the perspective of other human beings and encourages them to reflect on moral matters. Finally, our rational ability is not formed and opened simply by knowing civic and moral truths, but by living them. We do not suggest that taking a Reacting course is the same as living civic and moral truths, but it can draw us a lot closer to living them than just reading about them. 587