Friday, March 27, 2026

action research into spiritual practices takes the cake

I’m grateful for cake to mark the ending of another cohort of shared spiritual practice action research last night. It was a delightful gift from a grateful research participant. “But you’ve given so much,” they kindly explained.

During Lent 2026, I’ve shared silence with 5 folk face to face and 9 folk online. Silence for 10 minutes in week 1, 20 minutes in week 2, 30 minutes in week 3 and a focus group reflecting on the experience in week 4. I’ve gathered research data by seeking participant feedback on the experience through surveys start and end, individual diary keeping, the focus group and my observation.

It’s been enormously rewarding personally, to sit in silence with others and then to reflect with them on the benefits and challenges. The shared silence has also been a significant extension on the John Templeton funded research on spiritual practices I was doing last year. As a result of this year’s work, I now have 4 cohorts and 22 participants from 3 congregations who have shared silence over a four week period. My researching means that I have lots of reckons about the social impact of shared silence and it’s impact on individual, group and societal vitality. But before I share my reckons, I need to analyse the data.

After cake of course!

My thanks to the private trust who are making this slice (pun intended) of the research possible. And if other private trusts are interested in funding high-quality research into the impact of spiritual practices on congregational vitality, do get in touch 🙂!

Posted by steve at 11:31 AM | Comments (0)

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