Faculty as Salt & Light
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Models of Ministry
The following are stories of faculty around the country
who have found interesting and effective ways to be "salt
and light" on their campuses. Each of the stories comes
from the Faculty
Newsletter, which we have published since 1990. Most
of those recorded here I have witnessed personally, and I am
impressed with the vision, organization, and prayerful execution
of the idea behind each story. In many cases the
name of the person is sufficient for you to contact them if
you want to get further information or please feel
free to contact us at info@facultyministry.org.
If you have found some ways, different from those here, to
carry out acts of ministry in the name of Christ on your campus,
we would very much like to hear about them. Otherwise feel
free to adapt any of these to your own circumstances, and we
would be pleased to hear how that turns out for you.
Co-workers in Christ for the university world,
Terry Morrison, Ph.D.
Director Emeritus, Faculty Ministry
InterVarsity Christian Fellowship |
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Contents
1 School Newspaper Ads with Faculty Names
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Vern Terpstra
2 Faculty Fund Raising for Student Projects
Cal State, Fresno
Randy White, Tom Boyle, Pat Kissel, and Richard Arndt
3 Weekly Brown-Bag Studies
University of Texas, Austin, Faculty & Staff Christian Fellowship
Don Davis
4 Annual Professional Group Meeting
with Christian Sub-Group
Don Davis
5 Journal Club
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
6 Public Lectures
The Illini Christian Faculty
7 Brown-Bag Lunches at the University
of Wisconsin, Madison
8 Use of Biblical Allusions in Lecture
Normandale Community College, Bloomington, MN
Scott Magnuson-Martinson
9 Nursing Faculty Engaging Nursing Education
With the Gospel
Mary Thompson
10 Placing Christian Books in the
Campus Bookstore
Seigfried Schaible
11 Acting as Mentor and Advisor for
Minority Students
The Ohio State University
Mike Foster
12 The Good News Newsletter for the
University of Akron Christian Community
Tom Price
13 Teaching Overseas I
14 Introduction of Professor to the Class
Otto Helweg and Mike Romanowski
15 Faculty Advisor Model
Ed Yamauchi
16 The Discussion Group as a Model
of Ministry
Henry A. (Chip) Kobulnicky
17 Teaching Overseas as a Fulbright
Scholar
18 Starting a "Grad IV"
19 Teaching Overseas II
20 Faculty Bible Discussions
Angus and Ruth Gunn, University of British Columbia, Canada
21 Using Every Opportunity
22 Four Modes of Ministry
23 Of Bombs and Butterflies
24 Vertical Integration
1. School Newspaper
Ads with Faculty Names
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Dr. Vern Terpstra of the International Business Department
at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, has published ads twice a year
in the Michigan Daily. Here is a
sample called "Faculty Friends." The introductory
paragraph reads: "Faculty friends are faculty, researchers,
and staff who are united by their common experience that Jesus
Christ provides intellectually and spiritually satisfying answers
to life's most important questions. We are willing to meet
at appropriate times with students who might like to discuss
such questions."
Then there follows a list of faculty names, their departments,
and phone numbers. Shortly before Easter, one was titled, "THE
TOMB IS EMPTY: CHRIST IS RISEN!" The Easter ad also had a note indicating that it was
sponsored by the LIM Christian Faculty & Staff Fellowship.
Several newspapers on campus and in Ann Arbor published articles
showing that these ads set off a lively debate. Some were critical
for the inclusion of phone numbers which were university numbers;
others criticized it as proseletyzing. There were letters in
defense and letters in opposition so it was definitely noticed
and became a topic of discussion.
Under the leadership of the InterVarsity sponsor and students
at the University of Wichita back in the early 1970s, a similar
project was done. Letters with all the Christian faculty names
known were inserted into faculty mailboxes requesting others
of like mind to call or write to any of those listed faculty
to express their interest in being part of their group. This
also created a stir but caused some Christian faculty to identify
themselves.
2. Faculty Fund Raising
for Student Projects
Cal State, Fresno
For many years the faculty advisors have sent a letter to
about eighty of their colleagues on behalf of students in the local
chapter. This was to raise funds for students to attend the
Urbana Mission Convention. The letter is a signed memorandum
sent in October with the names of three faculty Tom Boyle,
Pat Kissel, and Richard Arndt as the faculty sponsors for CSUF
chapter, InterVarsity Christian Fellowship. Subject: Urbana
Scholarship Need.
The first paragraph is written to make faculty aware of the
need for $2,500 to provide scholarships and gives information about
the convention. It also says that the chapter has raised over
$900 toward the $2,500 as of this date. Then there is more information
about the impact Urbana has had in the past and
the final paragraph gives the details of how to send their
gifts. It closes by indicating the gift is tax-deductible and
guaranteeing their names will not be placed on an InterVarsity
mailing list.
3. Weekly Brown-Bag Studies
University of Texas, Austin, Faculty & Staff Christian Fellowship
Early in the semester, all the faculty and staff members on
the Fellowship Master List were invited to attend a brown-bag
lunch and meeting one Tuesday during the noon hour. Nearly
twenty people showed up including several new assistant professors.
The group agreed to continue meeting on Tuesday at noon to
study the challenges, threats, and opportunities of multiculturalism
to the Christian faith on the university campus. Multiculturalism
was understood to incorporate both the traditional racial-ethnic
emphases and the newer ideological oppression-oriented political
expressions. One of the faculty took responsibility to line
up a varied program of readings and speakers.
In subsequent weeks, the group read and discussed several articles
and chapters of books dealing with the topic and heard insights
from several colleagues outside the group. An African-American
professor discussed the history of African-American acceptance
on university campuses. Two professors of English spoke about
their experiences in the department when they were discussing
curriculum revision. One mentioned it as the "new intolerance,"
the other shared enthusiasm for the new course being taught
titled "Multicultural Approaches to Literary Studies."
Two faculty members took the responsibility to distribute announcements
about the topics and events in campus mailboxes through the
semester.
In addition, the group agreed that the first Tuesday meeting
of each month be devoted to sharing and prayer. As many as
possible met for breakfast in one of the faculty homes each
month as well. During the course of the semester the group
signed a letter to the university president informing him of
their existence and assuring him of their prayers. They received,
some time later, a courteous reply.
There were some other social gatherings also. In addition,
there was a noon faculty luncheon at which Walter Bradley,
Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Department Head at
Texas A & M University, spoke on the subject "Conversations
with Russian Faculty on Atheism and Christianity." About
sixty faculty and guests attended. On the last day of classes,
the group sponsored a Christmas carol sing on the steps of
the Administration Building, which featured a brass ensemble
consisting of eight faculty and grad students from the Department
of Music. About 150 gathered to sing carols.
There is a Steering Committee consisting of four faculty who
meet together regularly to keep this group going. They all
are delighted with the progress the group has made in the year.
4. Christian
Witness in Professional Organizations
Most faculty attend meetings of various professional organizations
of their discipline. At a number of these, there are breakfasts
or other meetings held by concerned Christians in the same
discipline. Here's a story of one professor of Library and
Information Science.
Don Davis served as an exchange lecturer in the UK and found
himself privileged to attend a service of thanksgiving and
re-dedication sponsored by the Librarians Christian Fellowship
of Great Britain. He was impressed with the dignified worship,
professional sensitivity, and evangelical preaching. The boldness
and public witness of these Christians within their profession
was remarkable to him. A similar organization had begun a few
years before in the US, and in 1984 the Fellowship of Christians
in Library and Information Science become officially organized.
In 1987, the British LCF and the American FOCUS took a step
of faith and sponsored a service of thanksgiving and re-dedication
during the International Federation of Library Associations
and Institutions Professional conference. They met at a church
near the conference site. The service which took the form of
hymns, prayers, scripture reading, and a sermon, was attended
by about ninety persons. Every year since then, a worship service
has been on the program of the international gathering.
5. Journal Club
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
This is an activity designed to bring Christians together
and to give them an opportunity to include non-Christian friends.
The Journal Club encourages interaction and personal sharing
built around a discussion time on a given topic.
Each month a leader is chosen to facilitate the Journal Club's
meeting. This person chooses a journal article covering a subject
relating religion and an academic subject. The leader is also
in charge of all the meeting logistics. After a short summary
of the article, the moderator begins the discussion by raising
issues or questions which have been brought to mind. The leader
both leads the discussion and brings it to a close at the promised
time. Usually, the discussion takes place around a brown- bag lunch.
This Journal Club procedure takes very little time to prepare
and execute. It brings people together sharing personal views
and insights and builds bridges among people who acknowledge
themselves as Christians. It also serves as a way for others
to see Christians in action, frankly discussing and living
their faith.
6. Public Lectures
Illini Christian Faculty
The Illini Christian Faculty organized themselves to present
a series of public lectures. An attractive poster with the
pictures of the five speakers was prepared. The topic was "Five
Christian Professors Speak Out on the Christian Worldview:
A Radical Alternative."
A dean and four professors gave the addresses over a six week
period. The meetings were held in a major room on campus and
one of the faculty led an informal discussion after each lecture.
The invitation was for "faculty, students, and staff who
are interested in pursuing the possibilities of a coherent
worldview, Christian or not."
7. Evangelistic
Brown-Bag Lunches
University of Wisconsin, Madison
The brown-bag lunches were started as a result of two faculty
who met to pray each Tuesday morning for their colleagues.
After four months of prayer, the men began reaching out to
contact their peers and invite them to a Friday brown-bag lunch
Bible Study.
The first one was held in December 1959. The plan was simple.
People arrived at noon, sat at a large table, ate, and conversed.
At 12:20 the leader for the day called for quiet, asked one
of the group to lead in prayer, and then asked another to read
the next paragraph in the New Testament. Then the leader asked
for questions and comments. There was never an organized study
plan in order to allow the session to be a seminar in which
peers could bring questions and responses to what the Bible
said. Invariably, there was someone with questions ready for
the asking. The session closed with prayer by a volunteer.
Attendance grew slowly but steadily from three at the first meeting
to forty regulars five years later.
8. Use of Biblical
Allusions in Lectures
Normandale Community College, Bloomington, Minnesota
Dr. Magnuson-Martinson of the Sociology Department at Normandale
Community College found it difficult to provide much in the
way of witness in the classroom without offending some student's
sensibilities and being accused of violating the separation
of church and state. He says, "However, I've been able
to integrate some religious material into my normal presentations
in such a manner as to make it seem relatively innocuous to
even the most adamant opponents of Christian thought and practice.
Indeed, these ideas and examples have been sufficient to precipitate
personal dialogue with some sympathetic students. I suspect
that it may also have served to give pause to some of my other
students to contemplate, at least in passing, truths not commonly
held in our materialistic, hedonistic society. Furthermore,
some minor publicity regarding the initial publication of these
ideas precipitated some collegial contact both within my own
department as well as others nationwide that revealed not only
fellow travelers, but additional ideas!"
9. Nursing Faculty
Engaging Nursing Education with the Gospel
Mary Thompson
Nursing education has been discussing direction, outcomes,
and philosophical foundations for the profession. What is needed
for that is a worldview or source of values a paradigm by
which to organize resources toward some desired end. New Age
thought has become a part of nursing theory and practice in
many schools. Christians have been challenged by this to do
their own creative work in building a philosophy and practice
of nursing that can become part of the larger nursing curriculum.
In November 1990, following a national nurses meeting, a think
tank of Christian nursing educators was held. Those assembled
considered the different worldview used in nurse education
and divided into five working groups to develop ideas and materials
for specific subject matter in their field. The participants
felt personally helped and professionally advanced by this
time together. Plans were laid for the development of ideas
and materials to re-introduce a Christian voice and biblical
thought into nursing education a voice and thought that once
formed the base for values in nursing education and care.
Largely as a result of this kind of working together, faculty
are finding they are more effectively and boldly speaking out
in their own faculties as well as making points that arise
out of their Christian background and thinking. Indeed, they
are being well received by colleagues, especially in the areas
of spirituality and spiritual assessment and care in nursing.
One side benefit to these recent efforts is that the conferences
and working groups can be co-sponsored by a faculty at a Christian
college of nursing and at a secular institution. A basic goal
of the Christian nursing faculty is to "engage their field
with the Gospel." Categories such as the meaning of persons,
health, environment, etc. are looked at biblically and theologically.
Already a few have published their work in professional journals.
They critique each other's writing and provide encouragement
and insight to make the writing as helpful as possible.
Nursing faculty and NCF staff worship and study the Bible
together in preparation for their work and undergird their
discussions and writing with prayer individually and in groups.
During these sessions, they will often stop and pray for what
they are thinking about, for the field of nursing in general,
and for key people in the field. This appears to be a true
integration of faith and academic work.
10. Placing
Christian Books in the Campus Bookstore
Seigfried Schaible
The general book manager at our campus bookstore regularly
sent out requests to the faculty for titles to be put on shelves.
I visited him several years ago and introduced myself as a
professor who thinks that historical Christianity is hardly
represented at all in the "Religion" section, only
the usual comparative-religion literature. He agreed. I gave
him a list of titles of evangelical literature from which to
choose. I told him that my model had been the excellent bookstore
at Stanford University which had a large selection of evangelical
titles. I emphasized that I am acting as an individual faculty
member, not someone sent by an organization or church.
I saw two major areas of need: (1) books that relate Christianity
to various disciplines on the campus and (2) books that are
helpful to the many international students (Christian or not)
who deserve an accurate presentation of Christianity in order
to understand some of the major roots of the US.
Meanwhile, I have continued to suggest additional titles to
the manager which often were purchased. He seems to have become
convinced that there is a market for evangelical literature.
Other literature, e.g. on other religions, various cults, etc.,
is also finding its way to the book shelves in increasing numbers.
It is important to say that from the beginning I did not manipulate,
push, or talk the manager into anything. I simply followed a
natural avenue that was open to any faculty member and occasionally
supplied a few additional titles. It is good to see the Lord
working in this endeavor.
A partial list of the books Dr. Schaible has had placed in
the bookstore: Bibles, a concordance and Bible dictionary,
Illustrated History of Christianity, Dictionary of Christianity,
some Bible commentaries, a work on Bible archaeology, books
on miracles, Bonhoffer's The Cost of Discipleship, books
by C.S. Lewis, Martin Luther, John Stott, and A.W. Tozer.
11. Acting as
Mentor and Advisor for Minority Students
Mike Foster
A few years ago, I was asked to serve on the Minority Engineering
Program Advisory Board, a committee of faculty, administrators
and some community people that gives advice on activities for
minority students in the College of Engineering of The Ohio
State University. God has raised our consciousness in several
ways over the last twenty-five years to the issues of race in America,
so I began to note the inequities in my own department. We
had graduated only a handful of African-American and Hispanic
students over the more than forty years of the department's existence.
We always had many African-American and Hispanic freshmen designate
our department as a major, but few made it through. Why? There
were, of course, many reasons. We believed that some of these
reasons could be dealt with internally in the department,
which is what we set out to do.
I undertook, with the support and help of my wife, to be advisor
and advocate for the minority students of my department. The
specific things that we did and continue to do, are quite simple
really, and I list them below for the sake of others who might
like to attempt similar activities on their campuses.
1. An evening study table happens every Tuesday night of the
academic year from 6-9 pm in a classroom of the department's
building on campus.
2. Careful academic advising of all minority students is given.
I asked the department chairman to appoint me as faculty advisor
for all the minority students in my department, now
around twenty-five students. I try to be available to these students
very frequently during the week; I encourage them to call me
at home or office about any matter at all.
3. Social events are hosted by my wife and me in our home
once every quarter with good food and conversation.
The goals of these activities are twofold: first, to give
the students every opportunity for academic success by providing
good advising us well as tutoring-type help. Peer learning
at the study table happens now as much or more often than "tutoring" of
students by me. Specifically, since there are students present
at the table from all years, often older students, who have
successfully completed a particular course, can provide helpful
insights to the younger students. Second, and actually more
important than the specific activities, we hope that the students
will realize that there is someone in the university who cares
whether or not they succeed we want the students to know they
have a share in the department; it is their department, not "ours."
I believe this has begun to happen.
My wife and I do not see this effort as a specifically evangelistic
enterprise, though we freely discuss our faith with students
when appropriate. Many of the students are Christians.
I have sometimes prayed with a student after an especially
disappointing grade report. God has called us to minister to
these students and to show Christ's love in any way we have
opportunity.
Last spring three African Americans graduated as aeronautical and astronautical
engineers; one is in law school, one in graduate school in
engineering, and one is still job seeking. My wife and I are
also most grateful to God that he has allowed us to get to
know some minority students and to be blessed by their friendship.
12. The Good
News Newsletter for the University of Akron Christian Community
Tom Price
This newsletter has a computer-generated format and looks
inexpensive to produce. An example of the contents would be:
Faculty Reflections, The Living Word, You Shall Be My Witnesses,
Alive in Us, Brothers and Sisters in Jesus. Within the body
of the newsletter is an introduction to the Faculty Christian
Fellowship with a listing of the faculty who are actively involved,
the meeting time, and an invitation for other faculty to join.
In one issue under Faculty Reflections, an article entitled A
Chemistry Professor Looks at His Discipline Through the Eyes
of Faith concludes with an invitation to other faculty
members to submit articles on how they combine their Christian
faith with their academic discipline.
Another article looks at how a faculty member is doing evangelism
during the course of the day on campus. The concluding article
is a dialogue between students and faculty on a problem area
they are confronting on their campus. The back cover lists
the Student Christian groups and their meeting times with an
invitation to subscribe to their newsletters.
The articles were submitted by students and faculty. There
was a review process, and the finished letters were distributed
by students and faculty in the Student Center several times
during the year.
13. Teaching
Overseas I
This is part of a conversation with a former InterVarsity
campus staff member who is now a missionary in Asia teaching
university-level English. It gives some idea of how an American
faculty person can serve in another country, both helping educationally
and with the Gospel. [No personal or place names are used to
protect the ongoing ministry of this faculty member.]
1. What kind of ministry ability is most needed for
a faculty member to bring to the country you work in?
A deep knowledge of scripture and relational skills
are essential for effective ministry. In predominantly non-Christian
areas, a faculty member needs skills in friendship evangelism
and one-to-one discipleship. Outreach and witness are almost
exclusively through personal relationships.
2. What would such a person say to his fellow faculty
who said, "Why did you come over here?"
Our country is in a unique situation right now because
there is still a high degree of religious tolerance. Our official
government papers say that we are here under a Christian organization.
So if asked why I have come, I reply, "I work for an organization
that is interested in assisting educational development in
developing nations. They have placed me here as part of a partnership
with this university."
3. Can one make a real contribution, help raise educational
levels, make the universities more effective?
Definitely! There are a vast number of ways to contribute
to making universities here more effective. The important thing
is that you are willing to operate at the level of your institution
and make your contributions slowly and humbly.
I remember one high level Swiss physicist from our team. When
he was looking for physics books in the library, he discovered
that the entire library collection was organized alphabetically
according to title. There was no subject or author catalogue in
fact, no catalogue at all. The only way to find a book was
to read the stacks. He and his wife quietly got next to the
librarian. They were able, very gently and over a period of
time, to suggest ways to reorganize the library which made
the books more accessible, without embarrassing the librarian
by emphasizing her lack of knowledge or skills.
Other faculty members on our team have designed job manuals,
written textbooks, designed curriculum, trained junior lecturers,
advised thesis students, and have made many other contributions.
In my own department, I was able to initiate a theater program,
help in library acquisition, write syllabi for several courses,
and contribute to faculty development projects. Once you're
accepted, there is much you can do, but initially you have to
earn the right to be heard and not to come in as a pompous
know-it-all, which would put people off.
4. How about academic support? Do you find, for instance,
in English teaching that you and your students have adequate
library resources etc.?
Resources will vary from university to university,
but in my country they are generally way behind American universities.
Our English department library, for instance, may have about
ten-thousand volumes. The important government universities
acquire equipment and books from a variety of inter-governmental
programs. Small private universities, like the one where I
teach, have higher fees and, therefore, have some funds for equipping
libraries and laboratories. In the universities in the provinces,
you may find little in the way of any resources to support
academic programs.
5. How about spiritual support for a person who goes
out? Is it adequate?
That would depend on where you are. I think the
InterVarsity-like movement in our country has a fairly good
network within the major state universities plus some private
universities. So you might find someone trained through InterVarsity
in the university community or you might find a small Christian
fellowship group. There are usually Christians in any university,
but they may be merely nominal Christians with little understanding
of the Christian life or desire to witness. Our missionary
faculty try to identify the Christians looking for the potential
to be trained in Christian discipleship. At the same time, they
are careful not to make their activities with Christians too
visible because they want to build bridges of friendship to
non-Christians. Most communities have a church, and, if the
faculty member confesses to being a Christian, it would be
acceptable in fact, expected for him to attend church. By
going out under the umbrella of a Christian organization, the
faculty member has the support of that organization within
his country of service plus the support of the Christian community
at home. This kind of support from like-minded people is essential
for faculty members who are working overseas with the goal
of witnessing for Christ.
6. If an American professor would like to do this on
a short term basis, can they be of any use without learning
the local language.?
You could be of use academically, but I doubt if
you would be of use spiritually. What you want is relationships
and most of these people are not terribly fluent in English,
particularly if you go to some of the less prestigious schools.
The faculty at the main government universities almost all
have PhDs from overseas so you wouldn't have trouble there
with English only. However, you would if you went to some of
the second-level type of universities.
7. Would you say there is still a strong need for Christian
faculty in Asia?
Absolutely! Universities in several countries have
requested faculty from a variety of academic disciplines. It
is difficult to say how long these openings will exist. We
are eager to see a number of Christian faculty join our team
in the near future.
14. Introducing
Yourself to the Class
Otto Helweg and Michael Romanowski
Have students introduce themselves giving name, major, year,
and goal upon graduation. Professor introduces him/herself
giving education and experience.
Witness. Dr. Helweg begins by mentioning that, when he was a graduate
student, a professor told him that "an engineer's job was
to design for a client and the social or ecological consequences
were a problem of ethics and the responsibility of the client." He
was not comfortable with this, but as a beginning graduate student,
it was difficult to dispute this with the professor.
He goes on to tell the students that since that time he has
discovered that "learned professors may be wrong but this
one was completely out of it." Dr. Helweg believes that
shifting one's ethical responsibility is a grand cop-out; every
decision they make is the result of their ethical presuppositions.
Dr. Helweg then goes on to say that you can't go very far in establishing
an ethical system without getting into theology. Of course,
the mention of theology leads one to be open to the accusation
of being biased. And, of course, the norm in the academic professions
is for professors to claim they are not biased, but in fact,
everyone, even professors, are biased. In technical fields,
the bias may not be as significant as it is in the humanities,
but when it comes to ethics, biases are crucial. He argues
that professors should be impartial, objective, and fair but
that in honesty they should reveal their biases to the student
because these biases will creep into the lectures.
So, in honesty, Dr. Helweg tells them his main bias. He identifies
himself as a Christian by re-birth and according to experience.
He tells them he's excited about the course content but when
that is compared to the questions of "What is the meaning
of life?", "Who am l?", and "Where am I going?", the
excitement of the subject matter pales into insignificance.
While people claim that discussing religion has no place in
the university, Dr. Helweg disagrees and tells the students
the university is a marketplace of ideas; and it is a subversion
of academic freedom to eliminate one of the most influential
ideas in human history, that of one's faith. He concludes by
saying he won't use the class as a platform to express his
theological opinions but will be quite happy to discuss it outside
of class with anyone either pro or con, and in fact, says he
would enjoy that. His final comment to them is, "If you
go through your university career without wrestling with these
important questions, you may receive a degree and you may receive
technical knowledge, but you will not have received an education."
Dr. Michael Romanowski, having worked with Dr. Otto Helweg,
developed that same approach for his Education classes at Ohio
Northern University. He distributes a four-page handout to
his classes in his opening lectures, titled, "So You're
Studying to Be a Teacher What Do You Believe?" This is
given to the students at their option. Mike tells me that 75%
of the students choose to take the survey.
His first two lectures focus on worldviews and how these play
out in the lives of teachers. "The lectures attempt
to demonstrate the significance of answering the important
questions in life and how these important questions affect
ones' teaching." Various examples are used, communication
versus indoctrination is addressed, separation of church and
state is discussed, and four questions delineating the basis
of a worldview are addressed. He uses these worldview questions
to investigate the dominant American educational practices
and challenges the students to investigate their own worldviews.
The handout is quite provocative and centers around his own
journey of faith with several columns of biographical testimony
material. It has a number of references to education literature.
It also quite adroitly quotes from the Ohio Northern University
Faculty Handbook where it encourages faculty to work for the
values contributing to the maintenance of the university community,
which supports and encourages students in their moral and spiritual
development. This is all brought home to the students under
the title of "What Shapes Your View of Students and Schooling?" He
assures the students that he will not utilize his class as
a platform to indoctrinate them but faces the issue of bias
openly and encourages them to investigate their own biases
and to use the worldview questions to evaluate the biases of
other presenters.
15. Faculty Advisor
for Christian Student Group
Ed Yamauchi
Dr. Yamauchi was recently fκted by students, staff, and
peers at Miami University of Ohio on retiring from twenty-five years
of serving as faculty advisor to the InterVarsity chapter.
From an interview with Ed and from letters written by former
InterVarsity students, we have compiled a Model of Ministry
for Faculty Advisors.
Dr. Y, as students have called him, has been in Miami's history
department for many years. A Professor of Botany, Dr. Wilson,
had helped bring about the first InterVarsity group and was
the first faculty advisor whom Ed succeeded. When asked what
training he had received to be a faculty advisor, Ed replied, "None,"
although John Alexander, then president of InterVarsity and
an ex-academic himself, often gave encouragement and supplied
helpful insights.
Ed's first step was to offer his services to the student group
wherever needed, and he began what became regular attendance
at the InterVarsity chapter's weekly large-group meetings.
He also tried to go to student conferences so that he had a
clear idea of what was going on in the students' lives. Of
course, at Miami it was expected of faculty advisors that they
be the administration's link to the student group. In fact,
the university held a yearly reception for the faculty advisors
to all student groups. (What a great idea! Why not suggest
this to one of your deans?)
One of Dr. Y's chief delights, and one many students were
so thankful for, was his regular prayer partnering with a student a
different one each year. He was so well known and appreciated
by the students that he was regularly invited to speak on many
different subjects over the years. In addition, he kept up a
weekly Bible Study for faculty and grad students over many
of those years. Many students testified to his accessibility
and value to them as an advisor and listener. A special ministry
Ed has carried out was also mentioned with deep thanks by graduates
writing back: he kept up with many of them after graduation,
writing notes of encouragement, and even visiting some on his
own travels. He says one of his great pleasures was to connect
people who were then able to help each other in various ways.
The correspondence for his celebration referred to him as
a great model since he was a zealous Christian and a committed
and productive scholar at the same time. They described him
as faithful, wise, patient, sincere, humble, and an initiative-taker for their good. That's what I (and they) call a model
Faculty Advisor.
16. The Discussion
Group as a Model of Ministry
Henry A. (Chip) Kobulnicky
How often do your colleagues ask you to sit down and have
a serious talk about the meaning of life? Or about how to live
a good life? Or about whether God exists? If you're like me,
finding the appropriate venue for deep, meaningful conversations
about life's big issues is one of the most difficult things
about sharing faith issues with colleagues.
One remarkably successful approach that I have experienced
at two major universities is the concept of the "Science
and Faith Discussion Group." Unlike a lecture, a Bible
study, or a church event, the discussion group is an informal,
non-threatening forum for people from all backgrounds and perspectives
to dialogue about life's big issues. The first Science and
Faith group grew out of a recognized need for regular opportunities
to grapple with intellectual issues (loosely) related to science
and religious faith. We wanted to have deep, protracted discussions
with people from diverse backgrounds, both theist and non-theist,
in order to better understand the viewpoints of others and
to better articulate our own faith-informed beliefs. The group
began meeting for an hour over lunch in an unused university
classroom. We later found that meeting in homes during the
evening was much more conducive to a relaxed atmosphere that
promotes openness and trust among the participants.
Each week, a designated facilitator chooses for discussion a short media-piece involving science, philosophy,
and religious faith. At first, only the group founders served
as facilitators, but eventually we began to rotate leadership
to ensure that everyone had a sense of ownership and a chance
to direct the conversation toward an area of interest. Most
commonly, the focus of the discussion is a newspaper or magazine
article from the popular press. Videos, audio takes, and even
cartoon strips are fair game for discussion. During summer
months when students and faculty have more free reading time,
we sometimes select a lengthier piece, such as a book or collection
of essays. Generally, the reading material is drawn from a
combination of secular writers and authors from within particular
faith communities. The exact balance depends on the interests
and faith backgrounds of the group participants.
The goals of the group are twofold: to help people "stay
current" on reading scholarly events, especially outside
of one's own discipline, and to provide a forum for people to
share and explore their understanding of "the way the
world is" in a non-threatening environment.
The first goal is, ostensibly, the main purpose of the group.
The second is far more important. From an evangelism standpoint,
it does not matter what you read. The important things are
the friendships that are made, the barriers that are broken,
and the lives that are changed as the result of genuine relationships
between followers of Jesus and their university colleagues.
In the best cases, the Discussion Group also becomes a group
of people who like each other and want to do social things
together too. We try to have a social event, sometimes in place
of the regular discussion, perhaps every one to two months. The reactions
of group participants testify to the impact such a forum can
have on a campus or a department. Recent ones from non-theist
participants include: "I'm surprised how much I like these
people!" "This is the first time I've known people
I respect who are serious about their faith." "It
has begun the many changes and positive outcomes I see in my
life today, both scholastically and spiritually."
We have found two simple rules very helpful in governing the
conduct of the group:
1. No topic, no question, no opinion shall be considered heretical
or off-limits.
2. Participants must come with the desire to listen and ask
questions in a spirit of honest, thoughtful dialogue and genuine
concern for each other. Disagreement and debate is encouraged,
but our goal is that people will leave with a better understanding
of each other and as closer friends than when they came.
17. Teaching
Overseas as a Fulbright Scholar
An Interview with Dr. Lytton Musselman
An interview with Dr. Lytton Musselman, the Mary Payne Hogan
Professor of Botany, Manager of the Blackwater Ecologic preserve,
and director of the Wetlands MS program at Old Dominion University
in Norfolk, VA. He is also on the faculty of Au Sable Institute,
where he teaches woody plants during exceptionally cold May
terms. Lytton is faculty advisor for the InterVarsity Christian
Fellowship group at Old Dominion.
1. You have recently returned from your third Fulbright adventure.
What have you done on these, and how did you get into the Fulbright
program?
The Fulbright program offers a variety of overseas experiences
for US citizens (there is also a large program to bring foreign
scholars here). Best known and largest is the Visiting Scholars
Program, which is administered by the Council for the International
Exchange of Scholars (CIES). CIES has officers for the different
regional programs. For example, I have always gone under the
Middle East and North Africa Program and have served on the
committee that reviews applications for this region. These
are competitive awards, and the application and selection process
takes about twelve months. First review is by a committee in
the discipline, i.e., biology and music. If you make it through
this committee, the next is the area committee. In the case
of the Middle East, this is composed of people who have worked
there and have expertise in that area.
Two kinds of awards are generally available teaching and research.
For my first award, I had a research appointment. I soon learned
that his could result in isolation from students so I volunteered
to teach. For future awards, I requested teaching and research.
This gave the greatest flexibility.
Teaching is THE way to get into the culture. I love the interaction
with students. My first Fulbright was in 1982, and the personal
contacts of that time are still bearing fruit both professionally
and spiritually. In the Middle East, a teacher is a very respected
person, especially at the university, so many doors are opened.
2. In what way have these experiences benefited your own work
and that of your department and university? How do you think
they have benefited your host institution and countries?
My time has been professionally and personally worthwhile.
I have garnered a lot of data and had the opportunity to write
up much of it. One spin-off of this is the preparation of an
account of the ferns as well as a project on wildflowers. In
short, I learned a great deal about the plants of the Middle
East. Collaboration with the Royal Society for the Conservation
of Nature will continue. We hope to have a joint project training
one of their staff at my university as well as having me visit
as a consultant.
3. Have they been good times for you and your family?
On a personal note, I have appreciated the interaction with
students and professionals, especially in agriculture and conservation.
But I have also been saddened to see darker aspects of this
society, different from other Arab countries in which I have
worked or lived. This includes the treatment of women, "honor" killings,
the general angst of this society, and the persistence of tribalism.
My wife loved her job teaching English and became the most
popular teacher even though she has a reputation for being
demanding! As a result, she was asked to teach numerous additional
courses.
For my children, one college age and one in high school, this
was a difficult country. Our daughter was constantly harassed
when in public. Like most other foreigners in their schools,
our son was always an outsider and constantly ignored and mistreated.
4. How do you think your Fulbright years have served Christ's
Kingdom?
My wife loves these young people, and I have seen her in tears
for them many times. At Christmas, she gave each of her students
a "Jesus" film in Arabic. Despite the way she has
been treated, she wants to return with the Good News! It is
so good for them to see people from a "Christian" country
who take Christianity seriously. Like most of the world, they
believe that a religious belief is part of every human's makeup.
5. Do Christians face any discrimination in the Fulbright
application and granting process?
I have not seen any discrimination in the process. In fact,
I told the Fulbright Commission executive about my faith. Because
he knows the Arab culture so well, he knew that Arabs would
accept the fact that I would speak up for my faith.
6. Is the motive to "do Gospel work" appropriate
or sufficient for one to try to get such a grant?
It is rare that people behave differently overseas than they
do at home. If you are active in student outreach at home,
it will be the same overseas. Like any position, we answer
to the Lord and have to be honest about the time we spend on
our job. Be successful at that, and use it as a springboard
for contacts and interaction. Use your time as a Fulbright
scholar working for the Kingdom the same way you use your faculty
position at home.
7. Any suggestions for those thinking about doing as you have
done?
Go for it! Now is the time! There is a needy world out there.
People are broken, their life is full of broken dreams, and,
like the song says, "at the end of broken dreams, he's
the Open Door."
18. Starting a "Grad
IV"
An interview with Dr. Brent Seales, Assistant Professor in
Computer Science at the University of Kentucky. Brent was in
a "grad IV" at the University of Wisconsin-Madison
and has been at Kentucky for eight years.
1. Why would a prof consider that starting a grad
IV group was important enough to justify the time and resource
investment?
Time management is essential in order to wear
all the hats owned by a faculty member. It would be easy to
fill a schedule with only research or just teaching alone.
But almost everyone in the university community agrees that "service" is
part of our charter. Professors as teachers also agree that
mentoring students, which usually goes beyond what is taught
in the classroom, is also part of our mission. And most importantly,
we as believers agree that our core faith principles should
be integrated into all aspects of our lives, including the
university duties of research, teaching, mentoring, and service.
Involvement with graduate student ministries is a serious time
and resource investment that is absolutely in line with our
mission as university faculty and believers.
2. How does one get ideas and information about what
a grad student fellowship might look like? Is there any help
available to get one going? How, who, and what gets it going?
There are more and more grad student fellowship
alumni who have moved into faculty and staff positions. They
represent a valuable resource because of their direct experience.
I have found the conferences hosted by InterVarsity to be very
valuable for exchanging ideas, finding resource material, and
locating people who are experienced with grad-student ministries.
InterVarsity staff who work with undergraduates often have
contact with graduate students. This can form into a core of
graduate students who are interested in exploring the issues
and concerns of being in the university for post-graduate work.
This is how the group at the University of Kentucky was formed.
Every student group needs a faculty sponsor, and the resources
and knowledge that a committed professor can bring to a new
group is enormous. Students key in on this kind of initiative
and implicitly understand that important things are involved.
My experience is that students will more readily follow the
example set by faculty when they see them continue to commit
time and resources to ministry even when other responsibilities
are substantial.
3. What does it do for you once it's there? What does
it do for the students, for the church? Does it help or hinder
their performance as grad students?
Graduate-student fellowships provide a powerful
mechanism for mentoring students in faith and profession and
forces faculty who are involved to articulate their own mission
more clearly. In particular, it is all too easy to get lost
in the details of professional duties, forgetting or intentionally
boxing out our faith principles. Graduate-student ministries
present us with the challenge of making our faith real and
integrating it with our respective work.
The local church is enriched when graduate students bring
to it the diversity and intensity of the university. Many church
members have no contact with the university other than through
its students, and it is important for them to see the trends
and struggles that students face.
Performance as graduate students, professors, or anything
else is absolutely dependent upon the grace of God. He expects
us, as believers, to make him Lord of every aspect of our lives.
God is the ultimate performance enhancer. Our individual faith
journeys will entail different commitments and directions,
but the elements of personal devotion to God and regular worship
within a body of believers are essential. They do not hinder
any aspect of what God has called us to do.
19. Teaching
Overseas II
Here's a model of stewardship (being salt and light) from
a professor of English as a Second Language.
Note the motivation to serve the country and church where he
went. (Identifying details have been removed from his story
because of the sensitive nature of his work.)
My faculty position allows me considerable flexibility
in the months of May and June after the end of the winter semester.
During three of the past four years I have volunteered about
five weeks to situations in Central Asia, giving
professional assistance in English-language teaching and joining
in Christian witness with resident believers. This, in a sense,
is an expression of my own long-term commitment to Central
Asia and the Middle East where I have spent earlier periods
of my professional career. In the spring of 1998, through a
lead from an IFES contact, I learned of an American couple
who had taken early retirement in 1991 and moved to a city
in Central Asia. Over the years this pioneering couple, a nurse
and a geologist, have established wide-ranging contacts
and good will through their own professional services. I first
met them by telephone and email and learned that the timing
of my arrival would allow me to have a lead role in
the local university's annual week of emphasis for
English-language teachers. So for one week I gave daily workshops
to both university faculty and upper-level students. During
a subsequent week I gave similar
workshops to the often neglected teachers of English in the
public schools. Along the way, I took part in several activities
of a newly formed church with many university-age
believers. I found I had an open
door of opportunity to extend encouragement to young
western families who had come under various sponsorships
for long-term residence and outreach. Probably the foremost
contribution I made to extending the Kingdom was to further
good-will between nationals within the university and schools
and the longer-term people who are preparing to assume positions
in some of these institutions.
As my academic expertise in an American university focuses
on language and cross-cultural education, the opportunity to
observe language teaching in a remote region, experience anew
personally the struggles of learning survival expressions in
a foreign language, and gather notes on a distinct foreign
culture are all valued in my year-round work situation in the
U.S. Further, it gives insight into the challenging issue of
nation-building in the aftermath of the collapse of the USSR,
and ideas for ministry in a situation previously closed to
Christian witness from the West. The experience gives one a
new sense of profound personal privilege knowing that colleagues
in the local high schools live on a mere $15 per month and
less.
My one regret is that other like-minded professionals, for
lack of common scheduling or personal finances, were not able
to accompany me on any of these recent visits. Particularly
for one's first venture to a new situation, there would be
additional benefits in partnering from start to finish — fellowship,
complementation, and more networking. Sites for such venturing
are limitless when one seeks out less privileged universities
that are in session during one's time of availability with
the assumption that the financial costs are to be born by the
ones who serve.
20. Faculty Bible
Discussions
Angus and Ruth Gunn, University of British Columbia, Canada
How can I cope with teaching, conducting research, studying,
publishing, drafting proposals for funding, spending time with
students, carrying a variety of responsibilities in the university
community, and at the same time retain faithfulness to family
and Christian service? As a professor trying to maintain a
position of respect and security in my department, I find this
question daunting.
If, however, I change the question and ask, "How might
some aspects of family life as well as support from fellow
Christian professors increase my day-to-day efficiency and
competence?" then I am encouraged. Think of a Bible study
on campus, one that is open to all faculty, including spouses,
designed for the university community. It would be different
from many church Bible studies; the common denominator is an
interest in becoming better acquainted with the context of
Scripture regardless of the weight one might put on its authority.
For the Christian professor there is very real value in such
an activity. Spouses can be involved in the work of reaching
out to university colleagues, and one's personal life can be
strengthened through team work with one or two fellow Christian
professors in the Bible study. Instead of being a drain on
one's energies, this kind of study group contributes to professional
life and "Christian Service" rather than being an
extra becomes an integral part of campus life. Even an occasional
evening spent in this kind of activity can be supportive amidst
the challenges of academic life. Several of us found this to
be true at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
In the early 1990s a few of us met for Bible study twice a
month during the academic year at the home of an engineering
professor on campus. It came about almost by accident. An interest
group of the Faculty Women's Club had been involved for some
time in a Bible study, and one day someone suggested that a
parallel activity for men and women would be a good idea. So
we began. Colleagues, some with their spouses, joined us. For
many of them this was their first Bible study.
We took a familiar route initially. An expert theologian was
brought in to lead a study of Mark's Gospel. We were sure that
such an approach would be the right one in a university setting.
How wrong we were! Our expert was sharply focused on his subject,
but our participants were more interested in interacting freely
on particular passages. We had overlooked the old pedagogical
adage of beginning where the learner is.
Fortunately, interest levels were high enough to bring us back
for a second year. As we assessed the events of the previous
year, we soon discovered that everyone wanted a thoroughly collegial
structure in which we shared all aspects of planning and conducting
our discussions. Our second year, therefore, began with a sequential
study of John's Gospel in which group members volunteered to
lead, a responsibility that often took the form of simply asking
a few starter questions. Interest grew and some new faces appeared.
One person said, "Can you believe this is the same group
as last year?" The new format gave freedom for open discussion
and sharing.
When we chose one of Paul's letters for study, things did
not go well. There was resentment, even hostility, toward Paul's
strong assertions. This convinced us that, given the range
of backgrounds, we should stick to the gospels for the foreseeable
future. There was common interest there in the person of Jesus.
At the conclusion of one series, a particular person who had
been highly critical of Biblical miracles expressed his thinking
in this way: "I am completely fascinated with this person,
Jesus."
Over time, mutual trust and genuine enjoyment of one another's
company has developed. We find ways for meeting socially between
terms. Different views are expressed quite frankly. The variety
of fields represented by the participants both enrich and challenge
us all. We have faculty from Geophysics, Astronomy, English,
Architecture, Computer Science, Education, Medicine, Engineering
and Commerce. Those loyal to the authority of the Bible purposely
kept to a minority often encounter totally unexpected comments.
For instance, when we studied the incident in Luke chapter
eight, concerning the demon-possessed man, one member, noting
the way in which Jesus allowed the evil spirits to enter the
swine, remarked: "This event is a good example of the law
of conservation of evil spirits."
To date, in spite of having met for several years, we do not
have stories of conversions, but we do have two significant
outcomes: (a) a heightened interest in the Bible; (b) new bonds
of friendship across a broad spectrum of belief. We are convinced
that we have found an appropriate model to help us share our
confidence in Christ with colleagues on campus. I should add
that we are fortunate in being able to meet at the center of
the campus in the home of a Christian faculty couple well accustomed
to hosting visiting scholars.
21. Using Every
Opportunity
Dr. Erin Schonblom, Professor of Engineering at the University
of Tennessee, Chattanooga, says, "A colleague of mine
posted Why God Never Received Tenure at Any University on
his door with the attached reasons. I walked by it several
times and then attached a hand-written rebuttal. This summer
while I was away, someone typed up the whole thing and placed
them in the faculty mailboxes." Dr. Schonblom gave thought
to something all of us have seen in many different places but
instead of saying, "Oh cute!" he responded with some
thought, put it out for public interaction, and got response.
He says, "Feel free to use my work as you choose." I
might add parenthetically that Dr. Schonblom has used his summers
and now all his days in retirement to run a computer camp for
young people in Appalachia. How's that for Carpe Diem!
Why God Never Received Tenure at Any University
| Original Reasons |
On the Other
Hand |
| He
only had one major publication. |
He
is credited with sixty-six books, which have a wider circulation
than any other publication. It was in Hebrew. Other portions
were in Aramaic and Greek. Translations into more than
a hundred other languages took place under his supervision.
|
It
had no references.
|
Original
papers don't need references; however, there are thousands
of internal references and a number of external references
to sources that have not survived.
|
It
wasn't published in a refereed journal.
|
Books
aren't published in journals. Since the original publication,
it has been quoted and cited in hundreds of journals.
|
Some
doubt that he wrote it himself.
|
No
other author has complained of plagiarism.
|
He
may have created the world, but what has he done since?
|
Acts
17:28 In him we live and move and have our being. (one
of the references that is quoted, cf. 3). Should he cease,
so would all creation.
|
The
scientific community can't duplicate his results.
|
The
scientific community has a problem, don't they?
|
He
never got permission from the ethics board to use human
subjects.
|
It
has been difficult to find enough board members with adequate
experience and seniority to request a review.
|
When
one experiment went awry, he tried to cover it up by drowning
the subjects.
|
On
the contrary, the experiment was published in his first
book, but never replicated.
|
He
rarely came to class and just told his students to "Read
the Book."
|
No
one has spoken directly to more students than he has. He
prefers tutorial sessions to lectures, in accord with the
best educational principals.
|
Some
say he had his Son teach the class.
|
Yes,
but he went with his Son.
|
He
expelled his first two students.
|
The
students were expelled for obtaining information
in an illegal manner and from unauthorized sources, for
failing to appear when first charged, and for lack of responsibility
for their actions; however, after their expulsion, he found
them jobs and took personal interest in their families
and children.
|
His
office hours were irregular and sometimes held on a mountain
top.
|
His
best students found him whenever they looked for him.
|
Although
there were only ten requirements, most students failed.
|
If
they didn't quit school, they graduated. |
22. Four Modes of
Ministry
Dr. Mark Foster is a man with a heart and mind to minister
God's grace to whomever he can, wherever he can. Here is "the
latest" in his ministry in and around academia.
There are four ways in which I have been able to exercise
my call as a Christian who is a researcher and teacher in the
academic milieu. The first is in leveraging my research expertise
to reach intellectuals outside the US. My wife and I decided
before we got married to be watchful for opportunities for
me to be an academician and speak to people overseas. We intentionally
sought a post-doctoral position in Germany, where I could pursue
research in an environrnent that would provide the proper training
for a faculty position in the U.S., but where we could also
be active in a "tentmaker" mode in some ministry.
We assisted as lay people with the planting of a church with
Greater Europe Mission (GEM). We committed to speaking German
with Germans, and I worked in the German language to make it
possible to build relationships. I had opportunities to preach
and teach Bible Studies in German as well as exercise friendship
evangelism. This cross-cultural experience was very valuable.
I desired to have opportunities to minister in the former
Soviet states, and in 1996, with an invitation from the International
Fellowship of Evangelical Students, I traveled to Ukraine to
speak in the capital city and another smaller city at several
colleges and universities. I also visited the National Academy
of Sciences. Each place I went, I presented at least one lecture
in my area of scientific expertise. At colleges with an emphasis
on teacher training, I presented a second lecture describing
the US and German systems of training scientists and engineers.
I also had a third talk with me, "Science and Religion:
Are They Compatible?" I had the opportunity to give this
talk in each school I visited. These talks initiated contacts
with students and faculty not only for me, but more importantly,
for staff of the Ukranian student movement "on the ground" in
Ukraine. It was a great experience.
A second mode of ministry has been to use my teaching expertise
in teaching Christians overseas. My wife and I have learned
that there is a great need for mature Christians with teaching
abilities to minister in fledgling seminaries and Bible schools
in the former Soviet states. Seventy years of official atheism
has led to the loss of more than a generation of teachers.
Through our contacts with GEM, we learned of an opportunity
to teach two week modular courses at a Bible school in Zaporozhyde,
Ukraine. We were seeking a way to minister together overseas
and were excited that each of us was accepted to teach a course
at the end of May 2001. This allowed me to travel just after
I finished my classroom teaching responsibilities for the spring
semester. Preparing the forty hours of lecture needed for each
of our courses while keeping up with five children and my teaching
and research responsibilities was very hard. Nonetheless, I
believe this is a ministry option others should consider. The
need is very great.
The third type of ministry is speaking on my home campus.
I have spoken on campus three times in open forums. First,
I spoke on the role of my faith in exercising my discipline.
More recently, I spoke apologetically twice at a "Skeptics
Forum" modeled after the Veritas Forum. These have provided
primarily an opportunity to state openly my commitment to God's
existence and his call on my life in academics.
The fourth and most personal ministry has been in mentoring.
In discussions with faculty from other campuses, which have
taken place at InterVarsity-sponsored conferences and workshops,
I've become convinced that mentoring of Christian graduate
students and post-doctoral researchers considering the academic
life is a desperate need in the US and Europe. In particular,
we need to talk more about what are the right questions to
ask as Christian researchers. On a campus currently without
either an undergraduate or graduate InterVarsity chapter, the
difficulties in connecting faculty and students in mentoring
relationships are amplified, perhaps. I have met individually
for some time with a talented graduate student who is committed
to integration of his faith and intellectual pursuits. Recently,
the opportunity presented itself to meet individually with
a second student. In the candid conversation that has developed
in just a few meetings, I shared with this student that I often
doubt my own impact on campus. I asked him if it was generally
known among the graduate students that I am a Christian. He
discounted the question as of secondary importance and said, "The
important thing is that I know you are a Christian. And that
makes the whole idea of being a Christian and being a professor
plausible. Before, I couldn't imagine it was possible." I
was struck with this insight. I knew that in Ukraine seeing
a Christian professor for the first time presents a powerful
argument for the plausibility of science being compatible with
faith. But on our own campuses we now face the same challenge
of living out the "plausibility" of Christian scholarship.
Mark Foster, Ph.D., Chemical Engineering, University of
Minnesota, is professor in the Department of Polymer Science
at The University of Akron and has done postdoctoral research
at both the Max-Plank Institute for Polymer Research and
the University of Minnesota. His honors include the Whitaker
Foundation Biomedical Engineering grant. His research interests
include the study of the microstructure of polymer thin films
and surfaces and protein adsorption at interfaces.
23. Of Bombs and
Butterflies
How does God touch an ordinary day at the office with mystery
and healing?
When Nom, a Laotian student, dropped in to see me about an
English paper she had written, little did I know that it would
open for me the half-remembered world of war memories that
defined my childhood. As I read her recollections of the war
in Laos and Cambodia that forced her family to leave their
Asian homeland for Boston, a strange destination halfway across
the world, I could feel the old pain of my own early years
return. The distance in time of thirty years between World War
II in the Philippines and the Indochinese War of the 1970s
disappeared as Nom and I began to talk about our common experience.
"Were you carried as a child when the family ran for
their lives?" "Were you hungry too?" "Do
you remember your grandmother?"
As we shared our stories, I was transported back to the mountains
of the island in the Philippines where members of my extended
family barely survived five years of malnutrition, malaria,
and fear. At the age of three, I too was a refugee, like Nom. I
remembered the dampness of the earth in the places where we
sought refuge from the bombs. And because memory is sharpest
when a child hungers for safety in the midst of danger, I also
remembered the fragrance of coffee trees in bloom in the dark
tropical night, as my family prayed to God for protection.
The scent of flowers made the sound of bombs less frightening.
"And what is your deepest memory of Laos?" I asked
Nom.
"Butterflies. Hundreds, maybe thousands of them, flying
close to our house near the Mekong River." Nom proceeded
to tell of the day when her mother, brothers, and sisters had
to leave because it was the only way to escape from sure death.
In tears, they walked away from the only home they knew, not
knowing where the journey would take them. When they looked
back for the last time, they were stunned by the sight of butterflies waves
and waves of color and motion filling the sky. They seemed
to come out of nowhere, as if their arrival was timed to coincide
with the leave-taking of a family that needed comfort and courage. "It
made me feel safe and loved," Nom added.
In the mystery of time and space, two children, both survivors
of two different wars, were held in the palm of God's gentle
hand by the imprinting of two indelible moments the
fragrance of flowering trees in the dark night as bombs fell
and the dance of butterflies in a war-ravaged landscape.
In the years that I have worked with international students
across the United States in several university campuses, this
decade has been particularly poignant. Increasingly, I have
known more and more Indochinese students who came to America
as little children during the years of refugee resettlement
and are now in their early to mid-twenties. Well-educated and
mostly acculturated, they are curious and often longing for
the homeland they barely know. My pesonal connection to their
story started twenty tears ago when my family along with other
church volunteers, welcomed arrivals from Vietnam, Laos, and
Cambodia into our community in Massachusetts. Several children
lived in our home scared, undernourished, confused.
In their faces, I saw mine, as a child of war a generation
earlier. That was the beginning of my healing journey.
Nom's story was a gift. In an unscheduled visit, which I originally
construed as an interruption to my busy day at the office,
she brought back to me what I thought I had forgotten, and
I helped her remember what she must not forget. Together we
understood the price that war exacts from the innocent, the
grace and grit of survival, and the resilience of spirit that
can rebuild from rubble.
"I would like to be a diplomat," she told me as
she left my office.
"I would like to write a book," I said to her, almost
like a promise.
Two Asian women, children of two wars, recalling the power
of butterflies and coffee trees in bloom against the terror
of the night. On that providential day when reading an English
paper led to a moment of healing, I felt God touching us and
blessing our stories. Truly, it was a sacred time.
Professor Priscilla Lasmarias Kelso, born in the Philippines,
did her graduate work in English and American Literature
at Stanford University. Her essays have been published in Not
Born in the U.S.A., a college reader on the immigrant
experience. Currently directing an international program
at Northeastern University in Boston, she has also served on
the board of trustees of InterVarsity Christian Fellowship.
24. Vertical
Integration
Even on campuses where a good-sized group of graduate students
meets regularly and a group of Christian faculty exists, seldom
do they strongly interact. At the University of Kansas where
faculty and grads, singles and families, meet together with
mutual benefit and much fruitfulness we find a great
exception to that general truth.
Former InterVarsity/USA Graduate & Faculty Ministries staff Bob
and Debbie Clark and their son Peter moved to the University
of Kansas with the desire to see both grad
and faculty ministry flourish. Here are several perspectives
on what God has done there.
The grads and faculty: The basics of who we are and what we
do
We are an interdenominational group of graduate students and
faculty at the University of Kansas connected by our common
relationship to Jesus Christ and our desire to bring his life
and words to bear on our lives and studies.
We gather for studies and discussions appropriate for Christians
who are academics and provide and participate in conferences,
seminars, service projects, and social events. We meet monthly
for fellowship, encouragement, singing and learning.
The groups we have formed include: Law School Group, two grad
Bible Studies, C.S. Lewis Reading Group, and discussion groups
related to Christianity and Culture, Higher Education, Science
and Religion, and Faith and Film.
The Clarks
Our experience has been that these activities and groups
serve to bring together students, faculty, administrators,
and their families, encouraging all who are involved. Grad
students enjoy exposure to mentors and families. Faculty and
administrators enjoy the enthusiasm and curiosity of those
who are younger.
A graduate student in American Studies
InterVarsity has given me an instant community, a group
of like-minded people who are different enough to challenge
my beliefs and thinking even as they offer me stability in
a non-Christian and, at times, even anti-Christian environment.
I have the opportunity to learn from, share with, and serve
intellectuals who know that academic life is part of the Kingdom
of God and who seek to better incorporate a Christian perspective
in their work. As iron sharpens iron, we help each other revise,
refine, and live out this Christian vision in our lives.
At KU, graduate students have a unique opportunity to fellowship
with faculty. Their wisdom, faith, and generosity bless the
graduate students. They provide strong role models of Christians
who successfully negotiate the tension between faith and education.
A physics grad student and his wife
The InterVarsity Grad & Faculty group here at KU has been
a tremendous source of help, fellowship, and enlightenment
to us. We have been encouraged and aided in connecting with
others, learning new things, and stepping out in leadership
and service. We have become part of a community that deeply
cares about its members, providing help in countless ways,
from meals to transportation. In addition, we have been a part
of reaching out to the broader community around us, by helping
sponsor lectures and other events and by having a huge variety
of gatherings to invite others to.
A faculty person
Most faculty at research institutions don't get out much
these days. When they do, they're not likely to place ads in
the campus paper saying, "I'm a Christian faculty-member,
looking for other, like-minded faculty and graduate students." Graduate
students, seldom short of things to do, are even less likely
to do so. Neither kind of university resident is likely to
find time to initiate book-reading groups with other Christian
faculty or graduate students, nor to start up grad-faculty
fellowship meetings, nor to plunge into opportunities for Christian
faculty to mentor Christian graduate students or for students
to evangelize curious seekers. And that's too bad, because
all of these activities are important. In fact, more than most
of us realize, they are important to the life of the mind and
the life of the spirit for Christian scholars, scientists,
and graduate students, and they often don't happen on a large,
secular campus like this one.
The Clarks' work has made it possible to spend time in fellowship,
study, and prayer with other Christians in a university setting.
Some have been brought to Christ, and many of us have been
brought closer to Christ. Graduate students will move on from
this place, strengthened and confirmed in their faith, while
faculty stay behind, also built up through the ministries that
the Clarks have established.
A faculty and administrator
I particularly appreciate how much InterVarsity means to
me when I realize how many people I know across campus whose
lives would never have touched mine were it not for the book
discussions, monthly gatherings, and small groups that InterVarsity
has offered me. Almost every day, it seems that I meet or share
email with people whom I first met through InterVarsity.
Writings from a discussion group
After one of the faculty and grad discussion groups had finished
reading Jim Sire's Habits of the Mind, they felt
the need for more to be said on the Christian virtues. They
brainstormed a list of fourteen virtues, and several of them
volunteered to write a paper on a virtue, which would be circulated,
critiqued, re-written, and possibly published in a book. Here
are very brief excerpts from first drafts of two papers.
"Living Honestly in the Academy" by a science grad
student
If it is our goal to live honestly in the academy, we must
first live honestly within ourselves. As academics, we spend
much of our time thinking. This is the first and most important
area of our lives where we must be honest, for if our thinking
is dishonest then what we do and say will have little hope
of reflecting Truth. How do we think honestly? We must start
by recognizing and understanding our presuppositions, assumptions,
preferences, and biases. We must then honestly assess what
we know and how we know it, and even more importantly where
our knowledge is lacking. We must also carefully and honestly
assess the views of those who oppose us. We must recognize
the merits and truths as well as the weak spots in their
positions. Someone who ignores the good points that his critics
make is being dishonest with himself. In fact, in order to
be truly honest in our thinking, we must seek out critics
and opposing views and diligently determine their merits
as well as their faults.
"Hope" by a professor in the humanities
What is true of money or influence is just as true of academic
or scholarly achievements. We can care deeply about becoming
great teachers, about making major break-throughs, or writing
important works. By themselves, these achievements cannot
comfort us. A friend once told me about a well-known professor
under whom he worked in graduate school. Years after graduate
school, the great professor in retirment confided to my friend
his bitterness that his accomplishments had not given him
more friends, a better family life, and more sense of real
worth. In his pursuit of success, he had never developed
his private life, nor, more importantly, a reason to live
beyond his accomplishments. Shrouds not only have no pockets
for money or power, but none for academic honors, published
volumes, or prestigious degrees. It is whom we love and how
we live, not what we have or what we accomplished, that can
give us hope.
Terry Morrison, Director of Faculty Ministries
My assessment of this model, after seeing many others over
the last twelve years of faculty ministry, is very positive.
This vertical integration naturally provides both wisdom and
stimulation to all ages involved. Because parts are very family-friendly,
it solves an enormously significant problem of Christian activity
being seen as taking away from family time. It also creates
a larger body of clued-in and concerned believers on campus
to take action for truth and justice and care. I highly recommend
it for your imitation or modification.
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