Tuesday, 1 April 2014

The History of Christianity in One Hour

If you had only one hour to cover the history of Christianity, from the Reformation to the present, what would you talk about? This was my dilemma today as I guest lectured in a course on the "Introduction to Religion."

I spent most of my allotted time speaking on the Reformation, including common Protestant beliefs, Martin Luther, John Calvin,  the Anabaptists, the formation of the Church of England, and the Catholic Reformation. I then moved on quickly to talk about Puritanism, Pietism, and evangelicalism. I argued that American Christianity shows traces of all these influences, not only in our religious beliefs, but in our attitude towards culture.

It has been some time since I taught a basic, general education, undergraduate course, and so I was reminded of the differences between  these types of courses and upper-level electives. In "Introduction to Religion," I had to work for the audience's attention. Most of the students appeared disinterested at first, and perhaps bored at the idea of a guest lecturer speaking on Christianity. I decided to take this as a challenge, and so worked harder than I normally do to emphasize specific points, integrate funny anecdotes, and use more hand gestures. I'm not sure how successful I was, but I was pleased that some of the people who put their heads on their desk at the start of class had by the midpoint showed signs of life.

I contrast this lecture with my earlier course on "Modern Christian Thought," an upper-level elective that I teach on Tuesdays and Thursdays, from 9:25am to 10:40am. The benefit of an elective course, from my perspective, is that students choose to take it, rather than enroll to meet a requirement to graduate. Today, I spoke on the life and thought of Paul Tillich. I have blogged before on the question of whether Tillich's thought is too difficult to teach in an undergraduate course. Although it was challenging for them (and me) to grasp some of Tillich's philosophical concepts, students were interested in trying to understand him and how he integrated philosophy and theology with culture. I look forward to Thursday's discussion on Reinhold Niebuhr, and next week on Karl Rahner and Dietrich Bonhoeffer.




Monday, 31 March 2014

Faculty Research Award

It has been a hectic few weeks for me. As the semester winds down, there are lots of papers to grade, committee meetings, and other obligations. I look forward to the upcoming summer break, and the chance to catch up on my blogging.

I do have some exciting news worth mentioning. Today, I was awarded UTC's "Outstanding Research" award for a faculty member within the College of Arts and Sciences. It is apparently a very competitive award, and so it was an honor to be recognized by the university in front of my colleagues. Hopefully, this award helps my case when I go up for tenure in a few years.





Tuesday, 25 March 2014

Can We Trust the Bible?

I've been incredibly busy the last few weeks, which is why my posts have been sparse.

If you are in the Chattanooga area tomorrow (Wednesday, March 26) at 7:30pm, please consider attending a lecture that I am giving entitled, "Can We Trust the Bible?" at the "House."

One of the organizers of the House ministries in Chattanooga asked me to talk on the formation of the biblical canon and the reliability of the scriptures. I will not be giving a sermon. Rather, I intend to take a historical approach in describing how the Bible was put together (the New Testament in particular), what books were included and why, and what we can learn from the variety of genres and narrative perspectives from the New Testament writers. It should be fun, and I hope that it will lead to a fruitful time of q & a.

Tuesday, 4 March 2014

C.S. Lewis Lecture at UTC

If you are in the Chattanooga area today, don't miss the thirty-second annual C.S. Lewis Lecture at UTC. The C.S. Lewis Lectureship was established in Chattanooga in 1983 by Charles Hummel of InterVarsity Christian Fellowship to perpetuate the Christian and literary legacy of Clive Staples Lewis.

Tonight at 7:30pm, at the University Center Auditorium, Ken Myers will be speaking on "The Second Friend: Owen Barfield's Influence on C.S. Lewis."

Ken Myers is the host and producer of the MARS HILL AUDIO Journal, a bimonthly audio magazine that examines issues in contemporary culture from a framework shaped by Christian conviction. He was formerly the editor of This World: A Journal of Religion and Public Life, a quarterly journal whose editor-in-chief was Richard John Neuhaus. Prior to his tenure at This World, he was executive editor of Eternity, the Evangelical monthly magazine. For eight years, he was a producer and editor for National Public Radio, working for much of that time as arts and humanities editor for the two news programs, Morning Edition and All Things Considered. Mr. Myers serves as a contributing editor for Christianity Today, and his published writings include All God's Children and Blue Suede Shoes: Christians and Popular Culture (Crossway Books: 1989), and (as editor) Aspiring to Freedom: Commentaries on John Paul II's Encyclical "The Social Concerns of the Church" (William B. Eerdmans: 1988). He has also written for numerous periodicals, including The Wilson Quarterly, TableTalk, Discipleship Journal, World, Crisis, First Things, The Washington Times, and The World & I. He is a graduate of the University of Maryland, where he studied film theory and criticism, and of Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia.

Saturday, 22 February 2014

History Tenure-Track Faculty Positions at UTC

For those of you looking for tenure-track faculty jobs, consider the following open positions at UTC:

Thursday, 20 February 2014

George Marsden on Inclusive Pluralism

I finally finished reading George Marsden's The Twilight of the American Enlightenment: The 1950s and the Crisis of Liberal Belief. This is another outstanding book by Marsden. I'm amazed that he can seamlessly move from studying Fundamentalism to Jonathan Edwards to Liberal Protestantism while writing first-rate scholarship.

The major force of the book is in the conclusion. After chronicling the influence of Enlightenment principles and optimism on American mainline Protestantism during the 1950s, Marsden steps back and offers his suggestion of how academia might function in today's pluralistic world. He argues that the intellectual elites of the 1950s naively assumed that humanity would continue to progress by implementing new ideas in philosophy and science. Thomas Kuhn's Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962) and other sources, however, contributed toward the dismantling of that optimism by showing that scientific discovery had not been building on objective knowledge. Instead, there have been "paradigm shifts" that have shaped the way that humans think. The so-called "secularization thesis" in which religious beliefs were supposedly declining, that most scholars took for granted in the 1950s, proved to be another false assumption since religion (and especially conservative forms of it) actually flourished in the decades going forward. 

Although a series of momentous decisions by America's government took place in the 1960s to create a "wall of separation" between church and state, Marsden demonstrates that the religious beliefs of many Americans continued to influence the public sphere, in terms of politics, business, and education. Marsden further draws attention to the fact that mainline Protestantism, while advocating "tolerance," shunned certain forms of religion, most notably, Fundamentalism, Pentecostalism, Mormonism, Orthodox Judaism, conservative Catholicism, Islam, and Hinduism. In the years ahead, however, conservative forms of Christianity grew exponentially, and open immigration policies in the U.S. brought waves of people to America who brought non-Westerm forms of faith with them. These changes in society, along with the decline of mainline Protestantism, has created a crisis of authority and additional problems of how various religious groups should charitably interact with each other.

Marsden proposes Abraham Kuyper's religious politics as a solution to these problems. Using the Dutch theologian and statesman as a guide, Marsden suggests that we should first recognize that our religious beliefs inform our way of thinking, including what we believe about science. As an Augustinian Christian, Kuyper believed that all humans have been created in God's image, regardless if they acknowledge an ultimate divine being or not. If this is true, then all humans share a commitment to basic moralism, ethics, and the need for justice because these ideals have been implanted in them by God. Marsden puts it this way: "Abraham Kuyper developed his views explicitly as a critique of the enlightenment ideal of a neutral universal reason, yet he was not a postmodern relativist. Rather than holding that various claims to 'truth' were artificial human constructions, he believed that God had created a reality that all people could know, in part if never completely. So he believed there was a place for shared rationality in holding a society together. Even though, as a result of human sinfulness, people were sharply divided as to their first commitments, they were still creatures of God who shared some commonalities in experiencing the same created order. So they also shared some important elements of common rationality and moral sensibilities, such as a sense of justice. Even though differing peoples need to recognize that no one stands on neutral ground, but all are shaped by their highest commitments, they can still go on to look for shared principles on which they can agree as a basis for working together" (168-69). Marsden points out that Kuyper's basic assumption can be labelled "common grace," which John Calvin and other Reformed thinkers had been advocating for centuries. Building upon this model of "common grace" that all people share, Marsden sees the government's role as acting "as a sort of a referee, patrolling the boundaries among the spheres of society, protecting the sovereignty due within each sphere, adjudicating conflicts, and ensuring equal rights and equal protections for confessional groups, so far as that is possible" (169).

I sympathize with Marsden's desire to see a society in which academics of various views can communicate their scholarship in a tolerant environment. I grimace every time that I hear or read about religious pundits saying horrible things while citing scripture as their authority. It is even worse when the media portrays these people as representing traditional Christian convictions. It is unfortunate that it is often the case that all those claiming to be evangelicals are lumped in the same group as outspoken, militant Christians. Thankfully, George Marsden, Mark Noll, and a crop of young religious scholars seem to be making progress in showing that Christians can be intelligent, well-read, charitable, tolerant, and able to interact with scholars who hold alternative views. It will be interesting to see if the ideas that Marsden discusses in the Twilight of the American Enlightenment gains ground in the years ahead.

Wednesday, 19 February 2014

Religion, Sex, and Politics in America

What happens when you offer a public lecture by one of America's leading religious scholars entitled "Religion, Sex and Politics: An American History"? Answer: Over 200 people show up to a venue that holds 150.

After eating dinner at St. John's Restaurant with our speaker, colleagues, and friends, we all made our way to the Camp House to find that the place was absolutely packed with people. Before 7pm, the Camp House had given away its 100 free drink vouchers. One person I talked with had driven from Pigeon Forge, which is over two hours from Chattanooga. After introducing Marie Griffith, I made my way to the very back of the room where I found a wedge of space to hear her talk.

In her lecture, Marie Griffith focused on three case studies involving the birth control advocate Margaret Sanger, the zoologist turned sexologist Alfred Kinsey, and the conservative Protestant Billy James Hargis. Griffith did not make any explicit statements about one person's view being correct versus another. Instead, she presented these case studies as a way of showing how Americans in the past have reacted to issues relating to religion and sexuality. Overall, it was a wonderful and intellectually stimulating talk, and a great way to close out this year's LeRoy Martin Distinguished Lecturer Series.


Tuesday, 18 February 2014

Theology on Tap/LeRoy Martin Distinguished Lecturer Series

Theology on Tap - Chattanooga's photo.If you are in the Chattanooga area tonight, please consider attending Marie Griffith's lecture on "Religion, Sex, and Politics: An American History" at the Camp House at 7pm. Her talk is part of the LeRoy Martin Distinguished Lecturer Series at UTC, working in cooperation with Theology on Tap of Chattanooga. As an added bonus, the first 100 people in attendance will receive a free drink voucher.