Font Size: +A -A RESET

the Outlook Blog

YOU ARE INVITED to participate in the Outlook Blog! This blog presents an ongoing opportunity for dialogue on matters of faith, theology, and ethics. You must be logged in to post, and our goal is to have this blog moderated by its users. Please direct questions concerning this blog to the webmaster via our Contact Us page.


lifework Recently a Catholic friend asked me about the state of the Presbyterian Church. She said that, for her, Presbyterianism has always represented a thinking person’s Protestantism, and that this historic role is more needed today than it has been for a long time.

 Thinking, education, intellectualism, or, as our Reformed forebears put it, the life of the mind in the service of God, are no less under assault today in the Presbyterian Church than in society at large.

 There are many in our society and even in our Church who are frankly suspicious of the life of the mind, who do not value education, and would replace it with indoctrination or reduce it to a kind of training in techniques. There are even some who have outright contempt for scholarship.

 During the coming year we’ll be celebrating the 500th anniversary of the birth of John Calvin, the architect and apologist of Presbyterianism. Calvin is fondly remembered by most Presbyterians as a leader of the evangelical reformation of the Church. And that he was. But he was also a scholar and an educator – and maybe a layperson. He was as relentless in exposing superstition, claptrap and humbug as he was in preaching the Gospel. A Renaissance thinker and a theologian of the first order, Calvin had more in common with Jonathan Edwards, Reinhold Niebuhr, and Kathryn Tanner than he would with the advocates of lowest-common denominator religious sentiment and superficiality in our time. 

 A church doesn’t move forward by running from its past. Every branch of the Reformation, and the children of those branches, all have their distinctive contributions to make to the life and faith of the larger Church. There are elements of their distinctive characteristics that I would hope we share, as I would also hope that they think about what they believe too. But my Catholic friend was right in seeing Presbyterianism as a Protestantism distinctively dedicated to thinking.

 From Scottish Presbyterians establishing the first universal public education program in history, to the founding by Presbyterians of many of the premier colleges, universities and medical centers in the United States, to the historic leadership Presbyterians have given in every field and profession that serves the public good, to our continuing insistence that our pastors be well educated for the practice of ministry: Presbyterians have consistently believed that disciples ought to exercise disciplined minds.

 There’s nothing elitist about trying to be the best educated and best prepared servants we can be. If tomorrow the Presbyterian Church were to abandon its role as “a thinking person’s Protestantism,” I have every confidence that God will raise up another people to carry this torch. And I’ll want to read their books and send my children to their schools.

 Michael Jinkins is Academic Dean and Professor of Pastoral Theology at Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary. mjinkins@austinseminary.edu



Trackback(0)
Comments (1)Add Comment
0
RE: A church doesnt move forward by running from its past.
written by Brian Merritt, November 10, 2008
I truly appreciate this post. One of the reasons that I left the evangelical world to become a Presbyterian was because I thought that they were the most intellectually engaged denomination. Yet, too often we think that honoring the past is by replicating it. Let's leave the petticoats in the past. That would be disrespectful to the idea of being a reformed person of faith. Thank you for reminding us that if we abandon what makes us distinct in our society we will be just as syncretistic and shallow as most of American intellectual and popular culture. If we are to be living beatitudes we will use our strongest asset, our reformed understanding of faith. I am convinced that it is what our society is hungering for.

Write comment
smaller | bigger

busy
Banner
Join Our News Alerts Mailing List
Email:
Banner
Banner
Banner