InterVarsity Logo InterVarsity Menu
Banner
spacer GFM Home
Features
Events
Most Emailed
Archives
About GFM
Grad Chapters



faculty home
Features
The Lamp Post
Events
Archives
Newsletter Archives
About Us
Contact Us
Donate

Ministries
Faculty
ESN
PSM
Law
MBA
RTSF
The Well
BSAP

Search GFM

spacer
line
spacer
Leading a Balanced Life of Excellence

What good is it if we gain academic prestige, yet forfeit our souls? Robert Kaita, Principal Research Physicist of the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, offers his perspective and a Scriptural basis for aiming to serve Christ and achieve academic success simultaneously.

Rock Tower

The environment in higher education is becoming more and more competitive. Dedication and focus to an abnormal degree are considered a must for success. What happens when struggling scholars have finally “made it,” but the “abnormal” has become “normal” for them in the process? This should be of special concern to Christians in academia, and is the motivation for this essay. It will not be a strict “how to” manual, as everyone’s circumstances are unique. There are, however, general principles that apply to us all, centered on a living and ongoing relationship with Christ. I will discuss them from the perspective of my nearly thirty years as a physicist at a major research university.

First, competitiveness for success in academia appears to be growing without bound. I’m sure most readers have heard of the Nobel laureate James Watson. He purportedly had only eight papers in his bibliography when he received tenure at Harvard a half-century ago. Admittedly, one of them was an article in the journal Nature with the modest title “A structure for Deoxyribose Nucleic Acid!”

What does it take to “make it” these days? Rae Mellichamp is an Emeritus Professor from the University of Alabama School of Business, and serves on the staff of Faculty Commons, the faculty ministry of Campus Crusade for Christ. As an outreach to young scholars, he has given a popular talk entitled “How to Make Tenure” on campuses across the country. Mellichamp is “right on the money” with his frank and practical advice.

First, not surprisingly, he tells you to “publish, publish, publish in the ‘right journals.’” Second, he tells you to focus on research, and not on “people” areas, such as teaching, service to the institution, and the like. Before we launch into what this means for us as Christians, I’d like to discuss a bit about who we are as scholars.

To begin with, what kind of people succeed in our business? For starters, many of us are introverts. After all, who else would spend their best years in a library basement or windowless laboratory? It may not be the best personality trait for developing social skills, but it certainly gives us the ability to focus and concentrate.

This may come as a surprise to many outside of academia. They think our “bread and butter” is to lecture, and it’s true. However, introversion should not be confused with an inability to speak “on topic” in front of large audiences. You can still do this, and be socially-awkward in less structured situations.

Here, I have to thank my very extroverted wife for her “tough love” approach to make me more socially aware. She’s very good in telling me when I’m “out of it,” and letting me know whenever she doesn’t understand what I’m saying. In fact, my former college campus fellowship friends have told her how much more “comprehensible” she’s made me!

Getting back to the demands of an academic career, let’s look at its implications. First, the US higher education system has been, and still is, the envy of world, our country’s loss in other areas of leadership notwithstanding. Furthermore, post-WWII policies and funding initiatives by the US government have greatly expanded the number of colleges and universities doing “top-flight” research. The result has been a widening of a “culture” that focuses on research, at even small colleges. For better or worse, Rae Mellichamp’s observations about research and publishing will be holding sway, no matter what kind of institution you’re in.

Such circumstances can pose real challenges for the Christian, especially when combined with our natural inclinations. The “system” hones introversion and focus to perfection. We see this in our “reward sequence,” which typically includes passing qualifying examinations of various sorts, writing and defending your thesis, landing a “tenure-track” position, and finally tenure itself. If you’re a professional outside of academia, there are clear parallels to this career path.

Alright, so you’ve gotten tenure or are otherwise established in your job, but then what? Rae Mellichamp tempers his advice about how to get tenure, with the need to look at all of your life’s priorities. There are perils in not doing this. Blindly deciding not to focus on professional “people” areas in the quest for success, for example, often translates into the same mentality in “non-professional” areas. Deferring family, church, fellowship with Christian colleagues, and the like to when you “have time” leads to a reflexive “I’m too busy” response no matter what. Every social interaction then becomes a “meeting with an agenda,” and this abnormal perspective becomes the “norm.”

What are some practical ways to avoid such a mindset? Many of them are familiar and easy to understand intellectually, but hard to follow through in practice. One suggestion is to develop spiritual disciplines as early as you can. A prerequisite, however, is something that’s frankly in short supply in higher education, and that’s humility. I like to joke that for those of us with an Asian background, it’s a little easier, as you’re often told of relatives whose accomplishments you’ll never be able to match! All of us, though, can benefit from the Scriptural concept that the “fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom,” as we read in Psalm 111:10. The humility to accept our intelligence and ability to study as gifts from God helps spiritual discipline to follow. Though harder to inculcate as we get older, it’s never too late to begin.

We can start with what we might call Christian “common sense.” We are to worship regularly, that is, never become “too busy” to remember Sabbath. We are to tithe, even when, I still recall, you make so little that the tax deduction is not needed. We should meet regularly for fellowship, ideally with others in your department or your immediate colleagues. Precisely because nothing here is extraordinary, any difficulties we have with maintaining such disciplines might be a “bellwether” of where we are spiritually.

A common mistake to avoid is to go “whole hog” in some Christian activity, and “drop out” totally when your schedule gets rough. There are times, of course, when we do have a lot to do, but we must be careful, lest we develop a “when I have time again” mentality that hinders future “re-engagement.” We need discipline to “finish the race,” as we read in II Timothy 4:7, as a marathon runner and not a “wind sprinter!”

I mentioned at the outset that this is not going be a “how to” lesson. Clearly, the best program of spiritual discipline is of little value, and cannot be maintained, if the motive does not come from Christ dwelling within us. We manifest this by our ability to “internalize” the lesson from Philippians 2. “Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit, but in humility consider others,” such as your colleagues and subordinates, including students, “better than yourselves.” This goes counter to much of what we see in the prevailing culture, which is all the more reason why we need the perspective only Christ can provide.

If this teaching of the Apostle Paul is too hard to make concrete, consider writing your own obituary. I don’t mean to sound morbid, but think of how you want to be remembered. If it is only to be as one of countless and eventually faceless academics, no matter how “distinguished” you might be, and has little to do with being a servant of Christ, you should appreciate this exercise as a “wake-up call.”

Receiving a Nobel Prize is a singular and wonderful honor, but few at Princeton can name the nearly three dozen who have been associated with that university. There was a cartoon that appeared awhile ago in the “Chronicle of Higher Education.” It depicts a scholar about to set a pile of his publications before his Maker, who tells him, “Very impressive Dr. Berwick. But I’m afraid that up here we judge the quality of your life, not the quality of your scholarship.”

If you do think there are things you should be changing in you life, begin modestly. The act could be as simple as checking up on someone you haven’t seen recently. From my long years of professional experience, I frankly sense the bar to be so low that simple expressions of kindness can really come out as “abnormal.”

If it’s any encouragement, let me tell you that I still struggle with the consequences of a personal nature that brings professional success, but could also lead to private “dysfunction.” Here again, I appreciate what my wife has done. She once volunteered me for Vacation Bible School because I did not have a “real” job. This was her way of saying that I wasn’t required to put on a business suit before dawn and face a long commute like so many other spouses. The need at my church was real enough, and my schedule was indeed flexible, so I agreed.

The young students had no idea how “internationally famous” their teacher was, nor did they care. What was most important to them was that I wasn’t boring. They let me know in very uncertain terms if I was, rather than quietly and courteously falling asleep as older listeners might. Those students taught me much about where my self-worth should truly come from, and what kind of servant I should really be.

In the First Epistle of the Apostle Paul to the Corinthians, he explicitly mentions that we should “eagerly desire the greater gifts” (I Corinthians 11:31). The chapter is referring to spiritual gifts, particularly as they relate to the church as the body of Christ. Because they do have analogs in the secular realm, it is easy and tempting to pick up on teaching, healing, and even “administrating” as “appointments” from God. If we want this as affirmation of what comes “naturally” to us in our professions, we must also take to heart what Paul writes later in that same verse, “And now I will show you the most excellent way.” He seems to be addressing us in academia directly when we read in I Corinthians 13:2, “If I … can fathom all mysteries and all knowledge … but have not love, I am nothing.” Only then can we appreciate “excellence” in the way God wants us to as His servants.


Robert Kaita

Robert Kaita has served as Principal Research Physicist in the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory since 1990. His research interests include: High temperature plasma diagnostics (including neutral particle analysis and X-ray and microwave imaging of plasmas), plasma heating and current drive with neutral beams and radio frequency waves, and plasma-surface interactions. Kaita has actively participated in the development of goals and strategic direction for Faculty Ministry through the years.

Photo credit: MB Balances Rocks




Comments:

(hide)
  • Thanks for the article! It was helpful. I am also a physicist. I got my degree from Cornell in 1985.
    I can definitely relate to a lot of what you said. I am fairly introverted and deal with similar issues. I am trying to live out my Christian life and family life in addition to my academic life.
    Thanks again for the article. It was helpful!

    Dave
    »  
  • I appreciate the desire of Robert Kaita to encourage his readers, who are Christian scholars working in universities, to be encouraged to simultaneously serve Christ and achieve academic success. By this, we take it that he means to assist such folks live lives that are of faithful service and worship to God, without becoming spiritually burnt out on the one hand, or unnecessarily discouraged in their academic vocation on the other. In this regard, we find his reminder for Christian academics to be active in nurturing the spiritual gifts, which he infers are personal prayer, Bible study, and involvement in the life of the institutional church, to be timely and helpful. We do indeed need to be very careful how we approach the urge not to attend the Sunday evening worship service or the Wednesday lunchtime Christian Faculty Fellowship meeting because we have too many term papers to grade, or because the deadline for our next academic journal article submission is fast approaching.

    However, whilst agreeing with Robert’s concern for his fellow Christian academics, we would urge him to re-evaluate the core perspective from which he operates, which seems to be an acceptance of the academic status quo and the division of life into apparently religiously neutral academic pursuits on the one hand and worship and service to God through spiritual activities on the other. We would submit that scholarship, and our role in it, is deeply religious, whether we are talking about physics, or human performance studies - as Ray Mellichamp’s colleague Phil Bishop demonstrated during his tenure at the University of Alabama. We would further contend that the role of a Christian scholar (but also non-Christan scholars for that matter) is not merely to accept the status quo of the advancement and success categories as defined by the contemporary university system. It may be “the system”, but if the system is wrong, then we need to work with others to seek to change it. To do otherwise is to engage in pre-emptive capitulation which is to give the game away before we have even started. The motivating force for Christians to “publish or perish” should not be primarily to achieve tenure (a structure which itself I believe to be problematic), but should be to faithfully exercise our scholarly gifts as an act of service and worship to God and for the betterment of His world. Faithfulness to God, rather than an obsessive desire to climb the academic success ladder, should be our motivating force. (cont.)
    »  
  • I’m also not sure that I would share Robert’s exegesis of II Timothy 4:7 where Dr Kaita seems to suggest that Paul is encouraging Christians not to “go the whole hog” in some Christian activity. I understand providing hospitality; or recreation with the family that celebrates God’s goodness and humanity’s stewardly lordship over creation; or preaching in church; or raising children; or engaging in scholarship at Princeton, - to all be profoundly Christian activities. Activities over which, when faithfully executed, God can say to us as he did to Naaman through Elisha when Naaman had to go into his king’s pagan temple: “My shalom be with you” (2 Kings 5:19).

    At the core of my concern is the inherent sacred/secular dualism that seems to be creeping into Robert’s analysis of the situation. It’s my contention that writing a well-prepared, coherent, research paper that has the aim of applying our insights to a better understanding of God’s world, is as profoundly an act of faithful worship and service to God as is singing in the church choir or financially supporting missionaries working in the urban jungles of Asia or Latin America. It is using the gifts and talents God has given us ultimately in service of Him. It’s similar to Eric Liddell’s comment that “God made me fast, and when I run I feel his pleasure.” It was in his running that God was pleased. I sense that God’s delight was just as real on the practice circuits of the sheep trails in rural Scotland or on the running track of the 1924 Paris Olympics, as it was in Liddell’s later life when he went as a missionary to China.

    I might be wrong, but I believe that in every circumstance of life, on Tuesday in the research laboratory, on Thursday in the shopping mall, on Saturday on the sports field, and on Sunday in the pew, as our Christian service, we are called to not be conformed to this world but to be transformed by the renewing of our minds that we may understand and give effect to God’s will in our lives (Romans 12). As Christians, we are called to do all that we do as unto the Lord. We are called to bring every thought into subjection to Jesus Christ. We are called to recognise that the earth and the fullness thereof (including physics and educational structures) are the Lord’s. We are called to live faithfully before Him in all that we do, to celebrate His lordship over academia as much as in town planning, sermon preparation, home-making, or recreation. (cont.)
    »  
  • I suggest that we try to avoid the well-intentioned but erroneous and intolerable stress placed upon Christians in education by fellow Christians who seem to suggest that scholarship is a religiously neutral enterprise, not really something that is honouring to God, and that Christian academics therefore need to busy themselves with church activities and generous financial giving in order to really be justified as being “sold out for the Lord.” This creates intellectual schizophrenia and the misunderstanding that causes Dr Kaita to encourage his fellow academics to avoid going “the whole hog” in Christian activity. In an age when it is almost universally recognised that scholarship of every sort is a deeply religious activity, we contend that what every academic does in the university is a deeply committed, faith-based activity, and that for us as Christian academics, done aright our academic activities can also be fully-fledged acts of worship and service that delight the heart of God. Exercising the spiritual gifts sure does mean prayer, Bible study, and joining in church services with God’s people, but we contend that it also means the research, teaching, and interaction that we do in the academy on a daily basis.
    Being “sold out for God” (and I have concerns about using economic rationalist metaphors) is in fact what we are called to do. Listen as Jesus remind us of the greatest commandment in Matthew 22:32: “Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.” Spending all our hours on research, to the neglect of our families or church life, is not a faithful walk. It is not going all out for God. And spending all our energies on church life, and not bringing our scholarly activity under the lordship of Christ, is not being all out for God either. Being sold out for God is apportioning and using our time and energies wisely in all that we do as deliberate acts of worship and service to Him.

    At around the same time as receiving Dr Kaita’s article from IVP, where Christians are exhorted to accept the intellectual and structural constraints of the university system and just get in there, work hard, and seek after tenure as the way to successful living as an academic, I also read an interesting article in the Sydney Morning Herald (27 August 2009) reporting on a speech by secular university president , Vice Chancellor Steven Schwartz, entitled “Unis must rediscover wisdom”. Schwartz was encouraging academics and students alike to reject the status quo in universities that sees educational institutions as training centers that just prepare young people to enter the job market. He urged those involved with universities to reject this utilitarian worldview, and work to rediscover the vision of seeking after wisdom as being at the heart of the academic enterprise. Which of these two perspectives do you believe is closer to the heart of God? The one that says conform to the university’s view of success and chase academic advancement as the means to a fulfilled scholarly life, or the one which says think through the presuppositions and values of your university, stand against the flow if necessary, and ensure that what you are doing is encouraging the search for wisdom and fulfilled humanity rather than mere skill acquisition and job creation.
    In conclusion therefore, I appreciate Dr Kaita in joining with us in wrestling with the issue of how best to honour God in all that we do. However, I do not accept the ways and means that he suggests that we adopt in order to achieve this goal. Acceptance of the status quo is dangerous, pre-emptive capitulation. Prioritising one’s life around the notion of success rather than faithfulness may be an embodiment of the American dream, but it is not a Biblical one. Dividing life into the sacred and the secular by seeing scholarly research and teaching as being outside of our Christian worship and service to God is a dualism that is typical of much of contemporary evangelical Christianity, but which seems to me to be inconsistent with what I understand about biblical truth. Our calling is to engage the culture, challenge the idols of our time, and seek to be faithful unfolders of God’s majestic world in every human endeavour. Or, as the Christian Faculty Fellowship in one university puts it, as Christians working in tertiary educational settings, we seek “in the very exercise of our [academic] calling, to bear witness to Christ in his gentle yet liberating rule”.
    »  
also about Academic Vocation

  Resources
 
How Can We Change the University?
C. John Sommerville expounds on the assertion that now is a time of opportunity for Christians in the university, introduced in his book Decline of the Secular University, to tell us how we must now embark on changing the academic world.
 
What is Calling?
Marc Baer of Hope College addresses conceptions (and misconceptions) of calling from personal, Biblical, and historical perspectives. Can we know our calling?
 
Discussion Guide for Marsden's Outrageous Idea of Christian Scholarship
Discussion guide for George Marsden's classic, The Outrageous Idea of Christian Scholarship, prepared by Stan Wallace, InterVarsity's director of Faculty Ministry. Part of the Faculty Ministry Catalyst Portfolio.
» view other Academic Vocation resources

  Events
 
 
2010 Midwest Faculty Conference
 
2010 West Coast Faculty Conference

SEARCH
Powered
by
FILED UNDER
»   Academic Vocation

TOOLS


 

 

spacer
© 2009 InterVarsity Christian Fellowship/USA ®  |  Privacy Policy
Questions about the website? Contact Contact the webservant
Member of the International Fellowship of Evangelical Students
Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability
InterVarsity Store Search the Site Contact Us All InterVarsity Ministries Banner