Sunday, April 29, 2012
To Write or Not To Write
I have officially finished my final edits for my Master's thesis (unless of course I suddenly find some more mistakes). And so...I will finally be printing off my copies this week for the LONG process of signatures, cataloging and binding. Perhaps I'll see it again by early Fall (Lord willing!). Anyways, if you ever wonder, "What is the point of writing a Master's thesis?" (which I have asked more times than I care to remember over the last several years while I worked on mine) I just happened upon a great blog post by Dr. John Stackhouse of Regent College that answers that question in a harsh, but honestly helpful manner. So what are your thoughts on a Master's thesis?
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
Another Bonhoeffer Volume Is Published
IT'S HERE!!! The eleventh volume of the sixteen volume Dietrich Bonhoeffer Works in English: Ecumenical, Academic and Pastoral Work: 1931-1932. I was overjoyed to find my copy on my front doorstep this afternoon. There now remains only one more volume (number 14) to be published before the series is complete.
Volume 11 in the sixteen-volume Dietrich Bonhoeffer Works English Edition, Ecumenical, Academic, and Pastoral Work: 1931-1932, provides a comprehensive translation of Bonhoeffer’s important writings from 1931 to 1932, with extensive commentary about their historical context and theological significance. This volume covers the significant period of Bonhoeffer's entry into the international ecumenical world and the final months before the beginning of the National Socialist dictatorship. It begins with Bonhoeffer's return to Berlin in June 1931 after his year of study in the United States. In the crucial period that followed, Bonhoeffer continued his preparations for the ministry, began teaching at Berlin University, and became active at international ecumenical meetings. His letters and lectures, however, also document the economic and political turbulence on the European and world stage, and Bonhoeffer directly addresses the growing threat of the Nazi movement and what it portends not only for Germany, but for the world. Several of the documents in this volume, particularly the student notes of his university lecture on "The Nature of the Church" and his lectures on Christian ethics, give important insights into his theology at this point. His ecumenical lectures and reports are significant documents for understanding the ecumenical debates of this period.I did note that Fortress Press is now offering all of the published volumes as a set for only $400 (which is a STEAL).
Sunday, April 22, 2012
Valedictory Address 2012
(The following was my valedictory address for the graduates of Providence Theological Seminary 2012):
Graduates, faculty, administration and friends of Providence Theological Seminary, I am humbled by the opportunity to speak to you today. This has been a long endeavour and I appreciate the confidence to address this great gathering.
Graduates, faculty, administration and friends of Providence Theological Seminary, I am humbled by the opportunity to speak to you today. This has been a long endeavour and I appreciate the confidence to address this great gathering.
As I consider my time at Providence, I would like to share
some reflections with you which are very dear to my heart.
It was five years ago that I set upon the Master of Divinity
Honours here at Providence. This journey
has offered more challenges than I had initially imagined. No one quite knows the cost of committing to
such things, even as the costs are carefully laid out prior to admission.
During my time at Providence, my wife and I have suffered
the loss of two unborn children and been blessed with the birth of our fourth
child whose name fittingly means “life.”
We have attended the funerals of nearly all of our grandparents and
several uncles and aunts. But we have
also welcomed nearly a dozen nephews and nieces into the world.
I have witnessed friends graduate and move into more
expansive roles of ministry where it has thrilled me to see the Lord’s leading
in their lives. I have also shared the
burden of two dear seminary friends who went to be with our Lord, even while
they committed themselves to training for such wider service. This is to say that my time in seminary has
not been removed from life, but fully participating in life with all of its
joys and sorrows.
This is life…lived obedience to the gracious vivifying call
of the Spirit of God in Christ…participation in His life in the midst of
this world. A world yet marred by
sin while still reflecting (though dimly at times) the glory of its Creator and
Redeemer.
What I have discovered--and rediscovered--over the course of
my studies is that such a life of faithfulness to God’s gracious call demands
prayerful and careful attention to the voice of the Spirit even as it is God’s
Spirit which works that call in and through us.
As our Lord Jesus declared through his servant John, “Anyone with ears
to hear must listen to the Spirit and understand what he is saying to the
churches.” These words echo in my ears
again and again. These words both haunt
me in my strength and enliven me in my weakness.
Am I listening? Are we
listening? Do we hear what the
Spirit is saying to the Church? An ever
attentive ear is imperative if we are ever to love the LORD our God with our
whole being.
The voice of the Spirit has much to say to us that we are
not yet ready to hear and at times do not seem desirous to hear. He has words of consolation and
encouragement, words of hope and joy. He
also has words of rebuke and censure, of sorrow and repentance. It is the 'Yes' of God to us and for us, even
as it must also be the 'No' of God to all that diminishes His glory. The Spirit is speaking, the Spirit of the
Lord and Saviour...our Lord and Saviour and even this world's. Are we listening?
He calls us from this place to a new place in the wider
world where we might declare the glory of God in corners long lost and bound in
darkness…places where many wait for a message of God’s radiant presence come
near. Places which beg for the light of
His kingdom come. Places where that same
Spirit goes before us even now preparing the harvest just as the harvesters
themselves are prepared.
Are we listening? Are
we so shining that the goodness of our God is evident to all. Are we ready for the good works our God has
prepared for us and has prepared us for?
Will we step from this place in faith-filled, Spirit-empowered obedience
to follow the narrow and difficult path of God which has been laid for
us...where the voice of our Lord speaks and we answer simply, “Here I am” and
“Where you lead, I will follow”?
Do we hear what the Spirit is saying to the Church today and
will we not be content only with what has been spoken in the past as if that
word is not the living and active Word of God?
Will we follow when we do not see far ahead? When a faithless world and a pseudo-church
reject all that the Spirit is saying?
Will we still love God as at the first, when the love of most has been
twisted inward or surrendered altogether?
Will we remain clean and pure in a world mired in sin? Will we cling to the teaching of the Prophets
and Apostles who have themselves traveled similar paths enduring to the
end? Will we trust in the only
sufficient provision for life...the One who Himself is Life? Will we hear what the Spirit is saying and so
join the great company of those overcoming and victorious saints throughout all
of the ages, as they sing, “To Him who sits on the throne and unto the Lamb, be
praise and honor and glory and power forever and ever”?
I tell you today, “As for me and my house...” we will
listen. And listen again.
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