the 9 marksarticlesaudiopublicationreviewsreading listchurch search
about usdonateeventseventscontact ussite maphome

« Video killed the... | Main | “Mark Dever doesn’t practice separation?” »

June 13, 2008

To Godly Seminary Professors Everywhere

by Jonathan Leeman

This is a letter to any of you who are godly seminary professors. I’ve want to write you about this for a while now. What sparked it recently is the announcement of a new biography on G. E. Ladd. Apparently, the biography focuses on the paradox of his life, namely, the fact that he did excellent scholarship for the evangelical academy while, simultaneously, sinking into depression and alcoholism because he could not gain the mainstream academy’s approval.

What a tragedy—to know God’s freeing truth in Christ in your scholarship so well, but to fail to apply that freedom to you own heart!

Here’s my purpose for writing you: I’d like to invite one of you to write a short booklet, kind of in the tradition of  B. B. Warfield’s The Religious Life of the Theological Student or Helmut Thielke’s A Little Exercise For Young Theologians, for aspiring Christian biblical and theological scholars and, more importantly, pastors everywhere. In your booklet, tell them that, as scholars and pastors, we should seek eternal credentials and accolades, not temporal ones. Tell them that the mystique of the academy is a trap and a lie.

Remind them that Elijah never sent Elisha off to the Assyrian academies, and Paul presumably never considered funding Timothy through the schools of Athens, in order to fit such men for the ministry. The thought is unimaginable. No, remind them that the scholarship they will do should only seek to clarify further a message that’s considered foolish and a stumbling block. If they intend to follow their Savior, their path is persecution, not praise. So challenge them to join you in suffering for the gospel, like Paul explicitly challenged Timothy.

Suggest to them that if, by God’s strange providence, one of them finds himself training in an institution which happens to garner worldly respectability, like Daniel and the three Hebrew boys in the palaces and academies of Babylon, that they would do well to abstain from eating at the king’s table and cozying up to the king’s banter. It’s a danger zone; it’s enemy territory; so keep praying in the direction of the Holy City.

Encourage them to ground themselves in the ministry of the local church. There’s nothing like the challenges of living and ministering together with fellow sinners in “real life” to bring the Bible’s claims into life-or-death reality. Also, you might encourage them to place themselves beneath a pastor or professor who demonstrates an indifference to the praise of people, the kind of man of whom the world is not worthy. How often does it seem like the young man who wanders off, enticed by the guild’s adulterous call to lie down in her Ivy perfumed sheets, is the pitiable one who has never been loved and nurtured by an older, wiser shepherd.

Brothers, will one of you write this booklet? Consider the possibility that it might be used to save a sheep from wandering off into a ravine and, what’s more, bring a whole flock with him. I’m tired of hearing those stories. Every one grieves my heart. Indeed, I know the temptations to hear the praise of men myself. That’s why we need one of you to write such a booklet, one that will remind us all with the words of Luther, “There are two days on my calendar, today and that day."






Comments

Great post. Someone should definitely take the time to write it. Can you give the bibliographic information for the Luther quote?

Good post. I found Carson & Woodbridge's "Letters Along the Way" very helpful as a seminarian and aspiring pastor.

Great post, Jonathan!

Why don't you write it? Your description of what it should be is probably better than what some seminary prof could come up with!

Jim

Baptists don't need any encouragment to de-emphasize education. We are already way too ignorant and I would hope rather that some professor would write a pamphlet encouraging pastors and members alike to a much higher standard than our present circumstances. Please!

Amen to both Jonathan's post and to Jim's comment. Your grieved heart, Jonathan, is shared by many who have seen (experienced?) Ladd's discouragement themselves.When they (we?) need help in preaching this message to their (our?) own hearts, the sincere and affectionate application of Truth by a brother such as yourself becomes the very ministry of God.

Don't wait for a seminary prof to write it -- you have the platform, the affectionate concern, and an articulate stewardship of the issue to speak faithfully. I, for one, would place it in as many hands as I could.

Hi today we are a long way away from Vincent Van Gogh, He was a Pastor and a Missionary. Had it not been for his Alcohol problem and Tabbaco addiction He probably would not have painted.
Most Scriptural hero's had depression. Moses, Elijah to name the obvious. Its what they do with it, Poor Job had it but that was caused with the problem, he seemed to be ok at the end. Moses had a burn out talking to a bush and became one of the greatest men in History. Elijah had a burn out in a cave, decided to retire. It effects us in different ways. Prayer, even pray with no feeling and grasping at the wind is still to be done. Stay in prayer, repent and do what the Word says. Talk the Scriptures literally or perish.

I think this post is an excellent idea for godly seminary professors, but the idea could also apply to godly professors in other academic areas. I became a professor at 25 and a university executive at 27; the "credentials and accolades" of such academic success did create some tension in my heart. We all face these situations. And remember, one of the great changes Luther brought to Christian thinking was our understanding that there is nothing extra-special about religious vocations. Business professors can "seek eternal credentials and accolades" from their work just as well as theology professors.

As a pastor with two sons in seminary, I can absolutely relate to this post and have felt deeply the things that you wrote here. Thanks

Excellent post. Let us realize that Dr. Ladd was an excellent scholar. His eschatology, especially, has had a deep impact. Perhaps you had something different in mind, but I did write something years ago along the lines of the call of the Christian scholar:

http://www.swbts.edu/resources//SWBTS/Resources/FacultyDocuments/Yarnell/TotheEndofGlorifyingJesus_TheScholarsCallingtotheChurches.pdf

Post a comment

The 9Marks blog aims to stimulate a helpful conversation among pastors, church leaders, and Christians about life together in the local church.

 


Search this Blog

 

What is 9Marks?

 

Subscribe to Receive:


About Comments: We ask for all public comments to be made prayerfully and with the respect you would offer to people face to face. Since these comments are public, we would be grateful if you would include your first name, last name, and church affiliation unless your question or comment is of a sensitive nature. We will not respond to most comments.

» Get RSS Feed

Authors

Recent Posts

Categories

Archives