Scholarship and Christian Faith
Enlarging the Conversation
Jacobsen, Douglas,
Distinguished Professor of Church History and Theology,
Messiah College
Jacobsen, Rhonda Hustedt,
Professor of Psychology and Director of Faculty Development,
Messiah College
Marty, Martin E. (Forward),
Fairfax M. Cone Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus of the History of Modern Christianity,
University of Chicago
Print publication date: 2004
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: July 2005 Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-517038-2 doi:10.1093/0195170385.001.0001 |
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Abstract:
The book examines the various ways Christian scholars incorporate faith into their academic endeavors. Literature in this area has frequently assumed a Reformed and evangelical style that links Christianity and academic study under the rubric of “the integration of faith and learning.” In contrast, Scholarship and Christian Faith argues that there are many different ways that faith and scholarship can interact with each other. Catholic, Lutheran, Episcopal, Wesleyan, Anabaptist, and Pentecostal alternatives are discussed. “Living the questions” of learning and faith is suggested as an approach that allows Christians (and, by analogy, persons of other faiths) to be constructively involved in the academy. The work of Ernest L. Boyer is used as an example. Scholarship and Christian Faith also discusses the role that scholarship can play in personal faith and in the life of the church. Finally, this book explores the idea of scholarship itself, drawing distinctions between analytic, strategic and empathic forms of scholarship. Four essays by other scholars embody and elucidate the themes of the book, including hope, hospitality, the relationship of science and religion, and the imbrication of learning and faith. A prologue (by Rodney Sawatsky) and an epilogue (by Kim Phipps) relate the discussion more explicitly to church-related higher education.
Keywords: academy, Anabaptist, Catholic, Christian scholarship, Christianity, church, church-related higher education, Ernest Boyer, hope, hospitality, imbrication, integration of faith and learning, Lutheran, science and religion, scholarship, Wesleyan Table of Contents
Preface
Prologue: The Virtue of Scholarly Hope
CHAPTER ONE.
More Than the “Integration” of Faith and Learning
ESSAY ONE.
Imbricating Faith and Learning: The Architectonics of Christian Scholarship
CHAPTER TWO.
Living the Questions of Learning and Faith
ESSAY TWO.
Is There a Christian History of Science?
CHAPTER THREE.
Scholarship and the Varieties of Christian Faith
ESSAY THREE.
A Modest (Though Not Particularly Humble) Claim for Scholarship in the Anabaptist Tradition
CHAPTER FOUR.
Scholarship Defined and Embodied
ESSAY FOUR.
Instinctive Response as a Tool for the Scholar
CHAPTER FIVE.
Contours and Contexts of Christian Scholarship
EPILOGUE: CAMPUS CLIMATE AND CHRISTIAN SCHOLARSHIP
Index
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