Friday, August 15, 2008

On the Value of a Theological Education

"With the drawing of this Love and the voice of this Calling

We shall not cease from exploration
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time

--T.S. Eliot, "Little Gidding"

via Brad: this post by Richard Mouw, president of Fuller Seminary. Are we beginning a new "dark ages" where theological and philosophical knowledge--yea, the liberal arts-- will be preserved in small enclaves, much like the Celtic monasteries? Wouldn't it be ironic if Fuller is someday remembered the way Iona is today?

Makes me want to reread Walter Miller's A Canticle for Leibowitz, and write a parallel work, wherein the threat to humanity is not nuclear warfare, but utility. And yet--dare I hope?--even utility, when followed to its end, may bring us back to the place we were meant to be.
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August 14, 2008

The Attributes of God

There is some evangelical buzz right now about a new biography of the late Bill Bright, founder of Campus Crusade (Bill Bright and Campus Crusade for Christ: The Renewal of Evangelicalism in Postwar America by John G. Turner). There is a helpful review of the book at the Christianity Today website.

I plan to read the biography. In my younger days I was somewhat critical of Bill Brights views on various subjects, but in his last years we got to know each other and formed a friendship. There was a time when Bill seemed to pride himself on having dropped out of Fuller Seminary, but in our conversations he expressed much admiration for Fuller, and for the cause of theological education as such. He was proud of his son Zach, now a PCUSA minister, who during his days as a Fuller student had been a leader of the student Peace and Justice Committee.

Bill and I talked by phone several times during his last months, and there was one comment he made to me that I wish I had asked him to expand upon. If I had to do it all over again,he said, I would downplay the Four Spiritual Laws and place a strong emphasis on the attributes of God.

That remark signaled a growing awareness on his part of the need for theological depth. And his specific example of the importance of good theology rings especially true for me. Several years ago I had a conversation with a pastor who had become somewhat sceptical of the relevance of seminary study. He had come to feel strongly about the kind of practical training for ministry that takes place exclusively in the local congregation. His case in point was the youth minister of his staff. This guy is terrific, he exulted. He has only two years of junior college, but he really doesnt need any more formal education. The kids love him and he is done a great job of ministry.

I ended that conversation of friendly terms, assuring him that we were there for him if he ever felt the need for using our school as a resource. A year later he followed up with a phone call. He wondered if I could recommend a good book for him on the attributes of God. It turns out that the youth minister had come to him with some theological questions. Some of the young people in the church had been talking about spiritual matters with their Mormon friends, and the kids were a bit confused about how their own churchs views stacked up against LDS teachings.

I recommended the relevant chapter in Louis Berkhofs Systematic Theology, and the pastor expressed appreciation for the counsel. Thinking back now on Bill Brights comment about the divine attributes, I wish I could also have directed him to the founder of Campus Crusade for some solid theological guidance!



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