A Calling to Talk and
Libraries
by Ken Myers
Host and Producer of the MARS HILL AUDIO Journal
The idea of the
university was discovered by Christians, who needed places in which to talk
about their Book, to discover the ramifications of its teachings for the life
of the world, and to articulate with greater clarity the lines between truth
and error. Christians knew from the start that the study of their own Book often
meant the study of other books as well, that such study was nurtured by
communities of students and teachers who could read and talk together about the
Book and the books. This was most fitting, because, as Robert Jenson has
observed, “We serve a talkative God, who does not even seem to be able to do
without a library. In his service, we will be concerned for talk and
libraries.”
Christians knew that
talk and libraries were ways (for people so gifted) to respond in obedience to
the great commandments to love God and neighbor. Talk and books are ways of
being tethered to truth. Loving God and neighbor requires knowledge of the
truth about God and the truth about the many challenges and opportunities of
human experience in the world God has made. The university was originally
assumed to be a place in which the diversity of these explorations could be
made more fruitful because of the
essential unity of truth (that unity accounts for the uni-
in university).
But many modern
preoccupations and prejudices have put asunder what God had once united. While
I know of no institution of higher learning that has changed its name to employ
the term “multiversity,” it would be a truer description of how these
institutions function. Thanks to the forces of skepticism, specialization, and
secularization, the assumptions about God, creation, human nature, history,
language, and truth that formed the foundations of Western higher education are
all in ruins.
To be fair, the Church
must assume some of the blame for this state of affairs. Skepticism about the
unity of truth is not hard to find in conservative congregations around the
country, which are often as anti-intellectual as the universities are
anti-religious. If academics assume that faith in God is a private matter to be
left at home, many Christians see the university only as a place to do
evangelism. The idea of Christian scholarship is equally outrageous to both
parties.
I meet many students
who struggle with keeping their faith intact while in college. There are numerous
ministries devoted to encouraging them in that struggle. That encouragement
often takes the form of well-crafted arguments defending basic Christian
beliefs, and these are obviously valuable resources. They reinforce the
foundational convictions on which we all build. But I sometimes wonder if these
students might be even more sustained if they had a robust sense of the rich
and comprehensive structure of Christian intellectual life which can be erected
on those foundations. If the congregations in which they were raised had
confidently and expectantly taught and preached and conversed in a way that
assumed the unity of all truth, and if they affirmed the value of intellectual
vocations, would these students be more likely to deflect skeptical questions
about their faith?
The recovery of the
convictions that built the Western university is a task for the whole church,
for every congregation and Christian family. We can begin by regularly
reminding ourselves that the God who saves us is the God who made us and all
things, that our message of redemption only makes sense in the context of the
bigger story about creation. Our God cares about all aspects of our lives, and
thus the renewing of our minds is as needful as the cleansing of our hearts.
Even with these truths
confidently affirmed by Christian students, they will still struggle in the
secularized multiversity. But their struggle will be assisted by a confidence
in the worthiness and importance of their calling as students, equipped with some knowledge of the right questions as
well as a godly passion for seeking answers.