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Uncategorized

AIDS Day Resources

AIDS, as the premier example of the havoc wrought by income disparities, and pornography, taking a toll on the souls of church leaders, are the two new most difficult challenges faced by the next generation of pastors. 

At Skye Jethani’s post "AIDS Activism Makes Strange Bedfellow" at Out of Ur, he gives a nice little report on AIDS day.  See my previous posts on AIDS with a link to the free online PBS Frontine video here and my post on pornography here.      

One additional comment.  I have been thinking recently about how social justice is cool (Rick Warren, Emerging Churches, etc.)  Because it is a "trend" (sad, huh?), pastors need to be careful to not think they invented the concept!  We need to continue to access the resources of wise Christian social workers, missionaries, economists, etc. rather than reinventing the wheel. 

Social workers, stand up and help us pastors!  We know now that we need to be facilitating and encouraging this justice work but it would be great if you would help us do it! 

(See my next post about the advice I gave some Christian social workers in a lecture recently). 

Categories
Uncategorized

How to overhaul Evangelical Theological Society Conferences

Tony Jones makes this comment about one of the ETS papers this year:

(Frankly, I’m a bit shocked that "scholarship" like this is allowed in an academic guild like ETS.)

Tony shouldn’t be shocked.  There is no quality assurance whatsoever at ETS.  I should know because I presented this year at the Evangelical Theological Society and my paper was not that good!  It is my impression that ETS accepts papers from anyone who proposes them.  The person simply needs to have a Th.M or Ph.D. or is working on it.  They also need to sign the inerrancy clause and thus be a member. 

No one looks at your paper before you deliver it.  No one looks at it after you deliver it.  You simply deliver your paper for 20 minutes and then take 10 minutes of questions.  If you are a no name, you may have 0-20 people.  If you are a big name, you may have 150.

Thus, there is zero structure that would ensure the papers have any certain quality.

Because I knew what the setting would be like, I viewed my paper as a kind of learning experience working paper draft that I was looking for feedback on . . . Since then I have decided to completely redo it!  🙂 

This lack of quality control differs from the Society of Biblical Literature (SBL) and American Academy of Religion (AAR) where it is difficult to have a paper accepted.  You have to submit your paper to a specialized area to get it approved and there are only a limited number of spots.  In some of these instances, the paper must be approved ahead of time.

It just goes to show that peer-reviewed journals are still the best way to get reliably good content. Not conferences.   

It is my perception that ETS functions as two things. 

First, it is a place for conservative evangelicals to talk with one another.  This is good in one way because sometimes in the broader guild you have to talk about methodology for a week to establish your presuppositions in order to actually talk about the topic.  For example, does the New Testament have anything to do with ethics?  You have to argue that at SBL. At ETS, you can consider that a given and move on to talking about specific issues. 

Second, the ETS also functions as a kind of minor league in the scholarship world.  The major scholars tend to present papers at more specific, scholarly settings like SBL and AAR. 

How have we gotten to this place?

The Boomer inerrancy wars have taken quite a toll on this organization. (See the musings from conservative Roger Overton here at the A-Team blog and here and here from Norman Geisler about his resigning because of the doctrinal slide of ETS on inerrrancy!) (H/T afriendnamedben here). 

Also note Tony’s comments about inerrancy here which I have pasted below.

5) The Authority of the Bible: Again, I am not mentioned, so maybe I’m OK here, too. But I am on the record as reviling the so-called "doctrine of inerrancy." It’s a doctrine that demands so many relative clauses ("in the original manuscripts"(which, by the way, we don’t have), "in the author’s intention" (which, by the way, we can’t know), etc.) as to render it worthless. I choose, instead, to speak of the trustworthiness, even infallibility, of scripture.   

I’m not sure how to sort all of this out.  While people continue to beat each other up over inerrancy, maybe there are some other things we can do.   

How do we reform ETS and make it a place where outstanding rigorous discussion scholarship is done?  So people don’t read half-baked papers like I read!  🙂

I know this discussion is being held by the hierarchy of ETS as well.  Many of them are known for their rigorous scholarship.  Greg Beale comes to mind.   

If ETS conferences are going to be renewed and reformed, they are going to need younger people in their 20’s and 30’s like us to take a leadership role in the process.

Here are some suggestions for overhauling ETS conferences. 

1. I think what we need to do at ETS is to appoint coordinators of each of the major areas.  These coordinators need to look through the papers before hand, which people submit in March.  They then choose the best papers to be presented in November.  Hopefully, they also send editorial suggestions back to the person.  In the end, there are less papers, but more quality ones. 

If not with the whole conference, we designate a strata that does it that way.  There are the level 1 papers and sessions.  Then we have also the typical open sessions.

We need to invite first tier scholars to pioneer these level 1 papers and sessions.   

These scholars also need to be from a range of evangelical schools and include evangelicals that teach at secular schools.  See my list of seminaries and where they fit on the evangelical spectrum.  The whole range needs to be represented.   

2. We need to provide scholarships for women and international guests to increase the diversity. 

3. We need to charge more for the conference.  Right now it costs $20 for the early registration for the member and $40 for the late registration!  Ridiculously cheap.

4.  Someone needs to redo the website.

See my thoughts on doing ETS well and the kinds of scholars that present there here.   

Categories
Th.D. / Ph.D.

Ph.D. Application Update

Update: please see my March 06, 2009 post Advice about Duke Th.D. and Ph.D programs in theology

Original December 2006 post:

I am applying to Ph.D. programs in Practical Theology for next fall.  Most applications are due December 31st. 

I'm applying at the following schools (in no particular order):

  • Duke Divinity School (Th.D. – Practice of Leading Religious Communities and Institutions, Ethics, New Testament)
  • Princeton Theological Seminary (Ph.D. Practical Theology – Christian Education)
  • Fuller Theological Seminary (Ph.D. School of Theology, Practical Theology – Missional Leadership)
  • Luther Theological Seminary (Ph.D. Congregational Mission and Leadership)
  • Emory University (Ph.D. Person, Community, and Religious Life)

Each program is excellent and I am excited about them for different reasons.  In my area only 1-3 students is accepted per year at each school.  Anything can happen in the admissions process.  It is very competitive.  In the broader pool, you are competing with all of the church history, systematic theology, ethics, New Testament, and Old Testament applicants.  Some of them have never left the library and done a practical thing in their life and therefore look pretty darn good on paper. In this pool about 20 are accepted for 150 spots.  That is about average for these schools.  And even fewer get funding.  Did I mention that it is competitive? 

Everyone asks me what my top choice is.  I would like to be accepted to all five programs and then have the happy problem of having to choose where do go based on what they offer me and a zillion other factors . . . but did I mention that they are competitive and that therefore this is unlikely?

These programs all weigh heavily your GRE score (which I take December 15), your foreign languages, your references, your grades, where you went to school, your personal statement, and your writing sample.   See my comments on taking the GRE here

Perhaps some of you didn't know that I don't have a Ph.D. I'm 31 years old and I have only have my MDiv.  Amy and I are teaching at Taylor University in our second year of 1 year contracts.  We were able to slip in without the typical Ph.D. because there was a one year position that needed to be filled.  Surprisingly, another one year gap presented itself this year.  We are enjoying teaching.  Amy and I share 26 credits.  (One full-time load is 24 credits).  We teach different courses and share the parenting load.  It is great. 

I'm very excited about doing my Ph.D. in order to deepen and learn and prepare myself for further leading, teaching, writing and ministry.  I look forward to continuing to serve the church by equipping pastors and young people in the seminary and university. 

Amy and I also have a deep love for the local church.  It would not be surprising if we ended up spending more time in leadership of a local church.  Amy misses church leadership greatly.  She would likely serve as an associate pastor part-time while I worked on my Ph.D and we would continue to coparent.

My interests in studying include:

  • Ecclesiology
  • How young adults in their 20's are integrated into church leadership structures
  • How emerging church values are affecting megachurches
  • Dietrich Bonhoeffer
  • Pauline ecclesiology
  • New Testament ethics
  • Bridging theology and practice
  • Practical theology
  • The use of Scripture by church leaders to explain church strategies
  • How contemporary business models affect models of church

I would appreciate your prayers in the next month as I contact references, finish my sample paper, and take the GRE.  (And grade papers, teach classes, get transcripts . . . You'll also hopefully understand if the blog gets neglected a little. 

Grace and peace to you.

andy

Update:

Give me feedback on my Ph.D. sample paper here.   

Other recommended links about the Ph.D. Application Process:

T Brookins on
Getting Accepted to the Ph.D: Preface
Saturday, March 29, 2008

Prof. John Stackhouse’s Weblog

Thinking about a Ph.D.?

Sean Michael Lucas, Chief Academic Officer and Associate Professor
of Church History at Covenant Theological Seminary, has written a post
about the phenomenon of seminarians getting sick of the church and
falling in love with their professors and becoming infatuated with
getting their Ph.D.  He tries to set them straight:Ministerial Students, Calling, and PhD Studies

There is a sober and comprehensive description of the New Testament
Ph.D. process by Nijay Gupta, a Ph.D. student at Durham University: Interested in a NT PhD?

There are also a lot of links at Durham Ph.D. student Ben Blackwell's blog:

Durham Ph.D. student Kevin Bywater's Why a PhD?