A
personal "mission statement."
I
see myself as called as a teacher to help prepare those students whom God
has put in my trust - by helping them discover the particular role God
has called or commissioned them to perform as servant-leaders, and to prepare
them to be as wise as serpents and innocent as doves in carrying out that
commission.
My particular goals [in order of
increasing importance] are to help them develop
1) basic knowledge
concerning our world and its ways - and techniques for adding to that knowledge
as future needs arise;
2) the wisdom to know how
to use that knowledge to make wise decisions as servant-leaders;
3) the character to ensure
that this wisdom will always be used in the service of mankind and to the
glory of God.
The
two paths.
I am a teacher - though
mostly in the style of a preacher (and vice versa: I teach when I preach
and I preach when I teach). When called to speak about what I know
to be true I have but one thought in mind: to invite others to consider
with me the world that lays at our feet - with the choice before us to
either approach it God's way or man's way.
I know the choice well. I have,
at various stages of my life, pursued one course - then the other.
I have played it man's or the world's way: a very successful organization
man as a university professor, a government administrator, an IBM systems
analyst, and as an ordained Presbyterian minister and contributing member
of a great corporate church. But I have also played it God's way,
living on life's edge, doing street ministry, jail ministry, church revitalization,
and Christian school teaching - trusting in God to help support a family
of six while I devoted myself to his ministry.
Between the two, the better choice
by far has been to play life God's way. I learned this at an early
age - even when it wasn't very clear to me who exactly God was. But
I did have some sense of a higher hand on my life - and thus lived boldly.
Now I play it with the clearest of understanding, teaching young Americans
about how choosing for God will fill their live with vision, significance,
and a deep sense of being alive to life.
Recovering
a "Christian political science."
I am one who rather late
in life came to understand the world we inhabit in Biblical terms.
I have become a “Christian political scientist.” Over time I grew increasingly
amazed at how the Bible, especially the Jewish or “Old” Testament, speaks
so powerfully about the social condition of man - the heart of social dynamics
that pose themselves to all humans, Americans, Jews, Persians, Greeks,
Romans - or whomever.
My background, my doctoral studies
at Georgetown University and my 15 years of university teaching (international
studies) in Alabama, was largely within the field we call "political science."
Typical of professionals in the field of political science, I was a complete
secularist during most of those years. But through a marvelous set
of circumstances, I later began to discover (as a "second-career" seminary
student in Princeton, then as a pastor in New Jersey and Pennsylvania,
and finally as a Christian high school teacher in Eastern Pennsylvania)
that the greatest of all political science textbooks, far above all others,
happens to be the Bible. What I came to discover in the story of
ancient Israel is how life works under the hand of the One who made all
heaven and earth. The patterns are clear – and as unshakable as the
laws of gravity, thermodynamics, quantum mechanics, etc. There in
the pages of the Bible is the very clearest explanation of how man is to
live in accordance with the “natural” social laws of God.
The
American way.
I am through and through
an American, loving deeply the great Anglo-American cultural legacy that
has been ours for 400 years - though I have lived, studied and worked abroad
much of my life and find compelling reasons to be deeply impressed with
the cultures of other peoples as well. I truly appreciate and celebrate
the accomplishments of other cultures: European, Middle Eastern, and Asian
in particular. I enjoy exploring the philosophies, arts and life
histories that they generated over countless centuries.
But most of all, I enjoy surveying
work that God has done among us in America since he first planted an Anglo
nation on this continent - one which continued to take in waves of immigrants
and risk takers who would flourish because they dared to help build our
nation to the glory of God - receiving in return blessing upon blessing
of an awesome nature. I take great pleasure in reflecting on
the social and cultural miracles by which God and man together moved forward
this unsophisticated, but nonetheless very inventive American culture.
And I especially love to invite others to share in that reflection with
me.
The
call to restore America's forgotten Christian political legacy.
I teach not only as a matter
of great pleasure, but also as a matter of great urgency. Somewhere
along the way America chose to forget that this country was founded by
people who understood clearly the principles of Christian “political science”
and who, well equipped with this wisdom, boldly brought our nation to greatness
- against great adversity. The Puritan New Englanders of the early
1600s who carved “Yankee” America out of the forests of America understood
these divine principles of political science very well. They worked
consciously in accordance with the laws and the ever-revealing will of
God to build “a city upon a hill.” 150 years later, the Fathers of
our hard-fought independence and the world's first truly lasting democracy
also were well aware of these principles of God's political science - quick
to affirm that none of America's new experiment in national democracy would
ever work apart from the people's continuing awareness of the overriding
or ultimate supervision or “judgments” of God.
But (as happened with ancient Israel)
we Americans, who are sinners like the rest, from time to time haven fallen
in love with our own logic rather than God's. We like the feeling
of "freedom" - that is, not having to be accountable to anything other
than our own private or personal wills. Today we are caught up big time
in one of these great love affairs with ourselves. And our social
institutions are suffering terribly as a result.
So I teach - and preach. It
is never too late to do something about our sins. After all, sin
is not a new or unexpected condition that we suffer from. God has
dealt with man's sins for thousands of years. Nonetheless, without
the wisdom of understanding the problems of sin, we will likely misuse
the freedom God has given us to block rather than aid God's redeeming work
among us.
This is the great tragedy of human
history: a people who once walked mightily with God and thereby found greatness,
but in that greatness forgot God as the source of that greatness, listened
to the flattery of the Deceiver who convinced them that their greatness
was from their own cleverness and special gifts, and were led away from
that God-given greatness into social decay and collapse. It's not
a new story. But it does not need to be repeated in America.
So I teach - and preach.
The
need to free the sense of "soul" from its bondage to "mechanism".
I am old enough (I'm in
my mid 60s) to remember when America was not what it has become today.
I remember when "America" referred to its people, its homes, its local
communities, its countryside and cities - and not essentially its government,
as it seems to today. I remember when America was stirred to action
through the popular appeal of charismatic leaders, able to inspire the
volunteer spirit in Americans to do the right thing. I remember America
when it was not run by faceless social programmers or “managers” such as
those today who have come to assume the responsibilities of life for us
so that we are now left "free" merely to pursue life's many "entitlements."
I remember America before multitudinous insurance programs and battalions
of lawyers.
The
need to recover moral integrity.
I remember when we were
led by "the Greatest Generation" – before we became socially lazy and culturally
vulgar. I remember when life focused on family rather than personal
profession, when we lived in communities, when we faced our social problems
and tried to overcome them rather than escape them. I remember when
education was about the cultivation of wisdom and not just the accumulation
of knowledge or facts (I remember life before SATs and ACTs).
I remember when character counted more than celebrity as the measure of
a person. I remember when piety was a trait we esteemed – and not
despised as some form of bigotry.
The
need for great American leaders.
So I teach - and preach.
I teach the youth who will be America's leaders of tomorrow. I teach
them not just facts. I teach them about life's problems - and its
long-standing solutions. I tell them stories about situations similar
to ours today (history!). I teach them about great individuals whose
sense of destiny shaped huge social outcomes - both good and bad.
I teach them the value of bravery and the tragedy of arrogance. I
teach them about the sources and possibilities of social power - and the
great accompanying dangers if not handled well. Most of all, I teach
them about the rules or laws of human life, individual and social, that
God set out for us, rules and laws that must never be disregarded, just
as with any other laws in Creation. With respect to the ways of the
world, I teach them to be wise as serpents.
The
path to greatness.
I teach them to be Alpha
males and females - but "Alpha" only as Jesus showed us what it means to
be "Alpha" - for Jesus was/is the ultimate Alpha (and Omega). The
Alpha person is the servant to all - as Jesus was the servant to all.
Service to others above concern for self - the makings of a true warrior
or one of the greatest of leaders - is what I teach them. I stress
again and again the importance of surrendering self to such service - in
order to receive in exchange a greatness of character that produces the
true leader.
Of course in our ego-soaked culture
of personal self-sufficiency and personal self-advancement this is a virtually
impossible task. But not for one who has turned his/her life over
to a power greater than self. Faith (as Jesus taught and modeled)
not in self but in God is the absolute key to such power. Without
faith in a higher source of life there is nothing to life but a shallowness
of purpose (or total lack thereof), an "existentialist" emptiness.
After all, we are, in all of creation,
uniquely crafted to be more than just mere creatures, mere "things" living
a rather tightly bounded physical existence. We have been given souls
and spirits that can soar in our thoughts and feelings to the outer reaches
of the universe – and even beyond. We can in our imaginations exist
in a time that once was and a time that will someday be - as if it were
the time we now inhabit. What awesome creatures are we - if we do
not fall into the materialist spiritual trap of seeing ourselves as mere
mammals and just so much genetic material confined to the here and now
of existence.
Being truly a great person is counter-intuitive.
Everything about the ego we are born with wants to fight any form of surrender
to others. We want to stand apart from others where we can provide
for our own "protection." And thus our own logic (where Satan prowls)
does us in.
It is only when we escape that self-serving
logic that we finally take hold of the greatness that makes us sons and
daughters of the Most High God whose plans, thoughts, and words (God's
Logos)
direct all existence. It is only when we reach toward God as our
"Abba" (Daddy) - as Jesus constantly directed us to do - and become joined
with his Logos that we attain greatness. In this self-surrender
we take on the quality of becoming innocent as doves - and achieve
true human greatness.
The
"teachings" offered on this website.
I do not propose to offer
on these web pages the complete picture or even significant portions of
what I teach. What I teach can be learned only through actual personal
contact - in class or wherever. What is posted here is some small
portion of those teachings - a factual backup of sorts. However it
is wisdom and not just mere knowledge, character and not just mere fact,
that ultimately is what my teaching strives to pass on to my students (and
what my students pass back to me in exchange) - something very much alive,
something that cannot be found on these pages.
Nonetheless, I hope that what is
offered here can be useful - useful in putting a perspective on life that
is otherwise largely lacking in modern Western or American material-secular
culture. Hopefully this perspective will stir within you key questions
- and in this raising of questions, stimulate a spiritual pilgrimage of
your own, a pilgrimage that might direct your path to the feet of a great
teacher or teachers, a pilgrimage that will lead you to want to become
yourself a great teacher some day. Then you too might show others
- how to become wise as serpents and innocent as doves
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