Obama Going to Messiah College
This is just an update that Obama accepted the invitation to the Compassion Forum that will be held at Messiah College on April 13th. See my earlier post about Clinton’s announcement to attend.
Clinton confirms she's going to Messiah College
I mentioned the Compassion Forum the other day, when we knew the invitations were being considered, but Hillary Clinton has made it explicit: she’s going to participate in the forum at my alma mater (HT: Beliefnet [the article is kind of a watered down version of the press release]). I don’t think this will be proving which candidate is “Christian enough” as one commenter at Beliefnet suggests, since the Forum will be focused on issues of broader concern (e.g., domestic and international poverty, global AIDS, climate change, abortion, genocide in Darfur, and human rights and torture). Note that the board includes folks like Jim Wallis, Gary Haugen, Richard Cizik, and David Beckmann.
The spin is that these questions are being asked from a faith perspective. I think it does more for challenging people of faith to think about important social issues than it ranks the candidates on their “Christianness.” What Jim Wallis says is that politicians are “wind chasers.” They stick their finger up in the air and see which way the wind is blowing. Wallis says that Christians (and I think all concerned citizens, no matter religion) need to change the direction of the wind–like MLK, Jr. I hope that this Forum is one more step to raise public awareness that the faith-based voters are not only looking for the best Christian (although some unfortunately are) but they are more interested in making real change with difficult social concerns.
I’m envious of the students on campus right now because of the amazing learning opportunity this provides them.
For the record, I’m still a little dumbfounded that presidential candidates are going to an Anabaptist school!
My Anabaptist Alma Mater To Host Presidential Candidates
This is something else. Messiah College, my undergraduate alma mater located near Harrisburg, Pa., is going to be hosting the “Compassion Forum” in the evening of April 13th (nine days before the Pennsylvania primary). Invited are Obama, Clinton, and McCain for a conversation on important moral issues that bridge the partisan divide. Check out this bit from the announcement on Messiah’s news blog:
The Compassion Forum will be a unique event—not another traditional debate. Each candidate will participate in a separate substantive conversation. The Forum will be moderated by Jon Meacham, editor of “Newsweek,” author of “American Gospel,” and a respected scholar on faith and American politics. Conversation topics will focus on compassion and social justice issues such as U.S. and global poverty; AIDS; climate change; Darfur; and human rights.
The compassion, reconciliation, and social justice issues to be discussed at this forum are relevant to the mission and values of Messiah College. As host organization, Messiah will be able to create important educational opportunities for our students related to this event.
It is sponsored, in part, by Council of Christian Colleges and Universities, the ONE Campaign, and Oxfam America.To my knowledge, the campaigns haven’t officially accepted the invitation yet, but it sounds like it’s assumed they will. I hope they do. It is pretty darn interesting. Presidential candidates come to an Anabaptist school to talk about how issues important to people of faith. Anabaptists have come a long way in their interaction with society and politics. Of course, most of the students at the school are not actually Anabaptist and many probably don’t know much about Anabaptism, but the school is intentional about its Anabaptist values (even if its not as explicit about them as, say, Goshen). I wonder what the campaigns will do when they learn that Messiah doesn’t have a flag pole on campus (oh, heresies of heresies).
What I’m not looking forward to are more jokes about the name of the school or references to the whole Monica Goodling fiasco.
I was first tipped off by these two stories (and my alumni email update).
Questioning Bart Ehrman's (Un)Faith?
It’s often stated that Bart Ehrman lost his faith because of his revelations in scholarship, particularly text critical work. For example, take a look at the quote from Daniel Wallace that I earlier referenced on this blog and to Craig Evans new book Fabricating Jesus (see pp. 25-31). In a recent interview with Biblical Archeology Review, he makes a clarification. Perhaps he’s made it elsewhere; I don’t know. Ehrman lost his fundamentalist outlook on Scripture due to his critical work with the Bible. In his words, “I shifted from being an evangelical Christian to becoming a fairly mainline liberal Protestant Christian.” What made him lose his faith, however, was the question of theodicy, that is, the question of why suffering exists in a world created by a good God. Ehrman became dissatisfied with “conventional answers” to the question, particularly the contradiction of answers that he saw in the Bible, and he “couldn’t believe in a God who was in any way intervening in this world, given the state of things. So that’s why I ended up losing my faith.”
It’s an important distinction to make and one that I wasn’t aware he made. The “enlightened Christians” among us (I’m indicting myself here) might be tempted to assume that Ehrman is misguided in his choice because he did not know how to shed his fundamentalist way of looking at the Bible without shedding Christianity entirely. We might say, “Well, of course inerrancy is wrong. You don’t need to ditch the faith because inerrancy is false!” From my perspective, if we do this, we’re setting up Ehrman to be a kind of “faithless dolt” straw man: his reason for unbelief is silly, so therefore, his unbelief is silly. But I think that Ehrman has raised a valid theological concern here. There are some pretty good answers to the theodicy question out there, but no one has the perfect answer. My undergrad adviser, Mike Cosby, liked to say of Job that he asked the “unanswerable question” and he got the “Unquestionable Answerer.” I like that way of looking at it, but it just highlights the idea that we have no good answer. Furthermore, throughout the discussion, Ehrman raises some valid points about needing to have good “reasons” to choose one faith over another (or faith over unfaith, for that matter). I guess what I’m saying, then, is that I’m not sure Ehrman’s unfaith should be the subject of our critique, at least not in the context of biblical scholarship.
I also appreciate Ehrman’s tone. It does not seem to me that Ehrman is anti-faith, but simply agnostic. He would like to believe, but doesn’t feel compelled by the reasons to believe. He doesn’t appear to hold it against those who do believe. On whether one cannot be a believer in biblical studies, I think he has a helpful and balanced perspective:
Historical scholarship calls into question certain beliefs and can call into question faith. But it can’t resolve any faith issues. There are historians who agree with everything that I think about the historical Jesus, about the New Testament, about the development of Christian doctrine, and yet they’re professors in theological seminaries training pastors. If you ask them, they will say, “Yes, Jesus is God. Historical scholarship doesn’t determine what we believe.” So I think what’s important is that people engage in historical scholarship. It’s better to have a knowledgeable faith than an ignorant faith, and it may be that it will change faith, but it’s not necessarily going to lead somebody to agnosticism.
The article is actually a four-way interview, or discussion, about faith and biblical scholarship. The other participants are “James F. Strange, a leading archaeologist and Baptist minister; Lawrence H. Schiffman, a prominent Dead Sea Scroll scholar and Orthodox Jew; and William G. Dever, one of America’s best-known and most widely quoted archaeologists, who had been an evangelical preacher, then lost his faith, then became a Reform Jew and now says he’s a non-believer.” It is a very good read, recommended.
Thanks for the heads up, Danny.




