Praise God for Terry Morrsion

At InterVarsity’s recent Graduate and Faculty Ministry staff conference, we honored Terry Morrison for his many years of ministry. Terry is currently Director Emeritus for Faculty Ministry, and served as IVCF’s second Faculty Ministry Director. Terry has a powerful ministry among Christian faculty around the country, and he played a small, but crucial, role in my own journey.

In college, I became an English major because I loved to read. Only after I responded to the call of Christ did I start to see that there were truths that could be understood through language, and began to desire to integrate my love for Christ with my love for literature. At the time, I thought that a PhD in English was the most direct route to this integration, and besides, I loved school and had very good grades and test scores, so a PhD made sense. I knew from personal experience, however, that English departments were not necessarily friendly to Christian faith, and explicit questions about, say, how Christ’s identity as the Word of God influences our understanding of human words were not exactly welcomed. I wrote a lot of poetry back then, and I was especially interested in the practice of language, and my relationship with Christ was a central theme in my poetry. I knew that I would have to be careful in my choice of graduate school, so that I would be free to explore this integration project.

Through a series of InterVarsity connections, I was put in touch with Terry Morrison. Robbie Castleman’s True Love in a World of False Hope had been very influential in my relationship with Elizabeth, and we had met Robbie at chapter camp in Florida. At the time, Robbie was working with graduate students in Florida, and she directed me to Terry, then the Director of Faculty Ministry. One of Terry’s gifts is countless relationships with Christian faculty around the country, and he immediately pointed me to three Christian English professors who he thought could help me.

I emailed all three, and put to them a question that, looking back, I think is a little odd: “Where I can I go to earn a PhD, where I can integrate my love for Christ with my love for literature?” The first emailed me back and said, “I have no idea, but don’t do what I did.” The second wrote back and said, “I have no idea, but perhaps Baylor.” The third wrote back: “I’m not sure there is such a place. I think you will be facing a long and lonely battle. You can, however, do what I did, and earn a theology degree first. That way, you will have the foundation you need to do the integrative work yourself.” I just happened to be reading Knowing God by J. I. Packer and Earth and Altar by Eugene Peterson at the time, and both men “just happened” to teach at a school I had never heard of, Regent College. And now you know the rest of the story.

Looking back, that series of conversations and connections – from Robbie, to Terry, to those three Christian professors (whose names, alas, I have forgotten) – was one of the key turning points in my walk with Christ and my understanding of my vocation. As I have joined ESN, I have spoken to many people about these conversations, and reflected on them frequently to understand why (I think) God has called me to ESN. I would be willing to wager that Terry was a central link in more conversations like these than he will ever know on this side of heaven.

And that’s why I praise God for Terry Morrison.

For Good Friday: the Seven Last Words

For this Good Friday, I am sharing a cycle of hymns that I wrote for my master’s thesis. These are based on the so-called “seven last words” – the seven statements that Jesus makes from the cross in the Gospels, which many churches use liturgically for Good Friday services. I wrote the lyrics: the tunes are traditional hymn tunes that can be found in many hymnals.  May they bless you in reading and singing them as much as they blessed me in writing them. The Seven Last Words (PDF) 

(Not) On the Road Again

I am home for a while, after three long road trips in three weeks.

  • At the end of February, I went to Nashville to see Kevin and Beth Line, some old friends from college (from the University of Louisville InterVarsity chapter, in fact!), meet some new friends from their church (Faith Church), and touch base with a few colleagues from InterVarsity.  Jason Ingalls, InterVarsity staff at Vanderbilt, has been doing some great work among grad students and faculty, and I got to meet with him and with a few of the emerging scholars he has gotten to know at Vandy.
  • At the beginning of March, I traveled to Chicago, and then on up to Madision, WI.  In Chicago, I was trained on InterVarsity’s website management system by Jon Boyd, who is also serving as conference director for Following Christ 2008.  Jon is a very busy person: his wife just gave birth to their second child.  I have recently taking over editing both the ESN and Faculty Ministry websites, and Jon was very gracious in opening his home to me and handing me the keys to the website.  I continued on up to Madison to introduce myself to some folks at InterVarsity’s National Service Center and visit with Rachel Bawden, our hard-working Operations Director for Faculty Ministry.
  • Finally, last week, I traveled back to the Chicago area for InterVarsity’s national conference from Graduate and Faculty Ministry.  We were treated to several great talks by Andy Crouch.  Andy is a writer, editor, and director of The Christian Vision Project, and he has some important things to say about Christians as cultivators and creators of culture.   He has a book coming out this fall which I am sure I will be recommending to many ESN members.  I also had the chance to see many of my InterVarsity colleagues and have several crucial conversations about moving ESN forward this year.

As part of our staff conference, many of the details of Following Christ 2008 (in which ESN will play a major part) were revealed.  I encourage you to check out the website and prayerfully consider coming and inviting friends you know who would benefit.

We also celebrated the ministry of Terry Morrison, director emeritus of Faculty Ministry, who is retired from InterVarsity after many decades of service as a student, professor of chemistry at Butler University, and longtime director of Faculty Ministry.  Terry played a small, but extraordinarily important part in my personal and professional development, which I will blog about later this week.

Public Policy from the Sermon on the Mount

Which passages of Scripture should guide our public policy? Should we go with Leviticus, which suggests slavery is ok and that eating shellfish is abomination? How about Deuteronomy, which suggests stoning your child if he strays from the faith? Or should we just stick to the Sermon on the Mount – a passage that is so radical that it’s doubtful that our own Defense Department would survive its application? So before we get carried away, let’s read our bibles. Folks haven’t been reading their bibles.

– Barack Obama, June 28, 2006, “Call to Renewal”

The more I read this passage, the more confused I am.  Obama goes on to make a good distinction between the commandments of a religion based on the teachings of that religion and general laws and policies that must be agreed upon by people of many religions.  But I wonder what he had in mind about basing “public policy” on the Sermon on the Mount.

Does he mean outlawing anger or lust?  Or providing tax incentives for the meek?  Or passing national building codes requiring foundations to be set on solid rock?  It’s not a simple equation from Scripture to public policy – and, I would argue, many of the opponents of abortion and same-sex marriage are not basing their positions on proof texts, as Obama parodies them.  I’m not sure if this is political rhetoric to play up to his crowd, or if Obama legitimately doesn’t understand the Biblical arguments against abortion or homosexual marriage.

Obama has been increasing his religious language in the last few days, and the great website GetReligion.org posted an article calling for reporters to ask Obama more direct questions about how he sees various Biblical passages influencing his policy positions.  I second that motion.

Free Books Online

Nonprofit websites like Project Gutenberg, the Internet Archive, and the Christian Classics Ethereal Library have long offered free books for download, including many classics of theology.  Now for-profit publishers are starting to get into the mix.  HarperCollins is offering complete books on their website, free for the browsing.  (It doesn’t look like you can download them – instead, you browse through the book on HarperCollins’ own website.)  Several works of C. S. Lewis are available, like The Complete C. S. Lewis Signature Classics, which includes Mere Christianity, The Screwtape Letters, The Abolition of Man, The Great Divorce, and more in one volume.

(HT: Freakonomics Blog)