Forgive me this long post. It’s hard to keep up with Anthony’s rate of
twenty posts per day, so I’m going to try and catch up all in one.
I am supposed to write a wrap-up blog on
the Jesus Conference in Dayton surrounding Jesus, Criteria, and the Demise of
Authenticity. Something else has
stolen my attention, though; namely, the crisis of critical scholarship in
theological institutions in American Christianity and especially institutions
associated with the Stone-Campbell church tradition, wherein I was raised,
educated, ordained, and, until recently, employed. To borrow the wording of Mark Noll’s
Introduction in The Scandal of the
Evangelical Mind, I write this post as a wounded lover of this church
tradition. I used to have no problem
identifying with the tradition as such.
Yes, some of the fundamentalist factions within the tradition could be
embarrassing now and again, but it’s my heritage and there were always scholars
like Everett Ferguson to whom I could point as serious academics. These recent events, however, have moved me
to a position of being just embarrassed.
Indeed, I don’t think I’ve ever been more embarrassed to answer when
people ask me what church tradition I’m associated with.
At the conference, I asked a panel what the
role of historical Jesus studies was in theological education. It came across, I think, like I was asking
them to speak to spiritual or faith formation.
I wasn’t actually. I was trying
to offer them an opportunity to weigh in on what happened to my colleague and
friend, and co-founder of this blog, Anthony Le Donne, who was presiding over
the panel (and in no way would have wanted to be the center of attention, which
is why I was trying to do this coyly). Anthony,
as many readers of this blog will know, was unexpectedly dismissed from Lincoln
Christian University, where I too was employed at the time and had served for
four years.
The
Le Donne Affair at Lincoln Christian University
The essential problem at LCU was over
Anthony’s popular level book Historical Jesus: What Can We Know and How
Can We Know It? It’s a fantastic
book that has justly been praised. The
problem was that Anthony does several things in there that, from one
perspective, seem too friendly to liberal approaches to the biblical
texts. For example, he says he reads the
fall of Jericho as a legend; technically a genre statement, but some of the
fundamentalists on campus and around campus didn’t like it. He also talked about demonic activity and how
it often fails to square with a modern worldview, but that ancients had no
problem believing in such things; technically cultural criticism, but some of
the fundamentalists on campus and around campus didn’t like it. He also praised Rudolf Bultmann; technically
one hundred percent correct because Bultmann was a genius and the greatest NT
scholar of the twentieth century, but some of the fundamentalists on campus and
around campus didn’t like it. They
wanted him to bash Bultmann, wanted him to self-identify as a Christian, etc.,
and so were upset as much with what he didn’t do as what he did. From the time that the book was published
until the time that Anthony was dismissed, the administration and other senior
faculty members continued to affirm that nothing in Anthony’s book was outside
orthodox Christianity or the faith statement of the institution. Let me say that again—no one in a decision-making
position believed Anthony or his writings failed to meet the faith statement of
the institution or orthodox Christianity.
The problem was people (who appeared to be) not in a decision-making
position who were on campus, in the community, and in the supporting churches. They eventually created enough of a ruckus
that Anthony was dismissed in an attempt to calm them down.
My deep shame at the actions of the
institution, sense that this was a dangerous precedent and I’d be next, along
with the exciting opportunity to join the faculty of St Mary’s University
College in London, led to my departure.
It is a shame, a true shame, because there are many fine people at
Lincoln Christian University.
The
Rollston Affair at Emmanuel Christian Seminary
More recently, another school in this
church tradition has been the center of controversy, as the news of Emmanuel
Christian Seminary’s disciplinary actions toward tenured professor Christopher Rollston has
gone public. Rollston is a very close
friend of mine, and I have always had great respect for Emmanuel’s other
faculty as well. I even delivered the
Frederick D. Kershner Lectures in NT there in 2011. Despite this familiarity, I do not know the
ins and outs of the Emmanuel situation and so will not try to speak to its
intricacies. I think it’s healthy for
all of us to acknowledge that we do not know what’s going on behind closed
doors unless we’re in the room.
That being said, a fury has been unleashed
on the Bible and Interpretation site. Thomas Verenna
wrote an essay on the Lincoln Affair and the Emmanuel Affair and Paul Blowers, a
church historian at Emmanuel, responded in defense of Emmanuel. (Jim West has also now weighed in.) The comments are where the action is. It’s heated, and what’s immediately clear is
that a major factor in Rollston’s situation is his Huffington
Post essay on the marginalization of women in the Bible. According to Blowers, part of the problem is
that Rollston did not talk about Jesus’ positive interactions with women and
did not speak more broadly about the Bible’s positive portrayal of women.
Now, of course, theological institutions in
my mind have not only the legal right but the responsibility to protect their
borders. The problem, though, is that I
can’t find anything in the essay that is at variance with a confessional
perspective. It’s an astute,
well-written, piece on an important issue.
I also think that the charge of not representing the broader portrait of
women in the Bible is a red herring.
Rollston wasn’t trying to write an essay on the Bible’s complete
portrait of women; he wrote an essay specifically on the texts that present a
biblical value that we (as the title of his essay identifies) don’t like to
discuss. The texts that are relevant are
defined by the topic—marginalization of women.
Le
Donne and Rollston Commonalities
Blowers has insisted that the Le Donne and
Rollston affairs are not the same thing.
There are, however, some overlapping issues that are significant. First, at core is not necessarily what the
authors said but what they left unsaid. Some
members of the constituency did not like the impression that what was unsaid could give of the institution to
outsiders, which in their mind is negative.
(I would demur here, arguing that both authors gave the institutions a
hearing in contexts where they are not often heard, and represented them
well.) Second, and related, we have here
in the crossfires the expectation of what people who work at X school should be doing, an expectation defined
by people who are not doing the work and are not usually in that particular
field. This means that scholars at
institutions of theological education have to answer not for what they wrote
but for what others (who may or may not have the expertise to question them)
think they should write as well as others’ (mis)interpretations of what has been
written. Being accountable for what you
write is one thing; being responsible for other people’s (mis)interpretations
of it is another. Third, the issue of
tenure is at stake. When I was first
hired at Lincoln Christian University I begged for the installation of
tenure. I was told by the (then) Dean of
the undergrad, “Are you concerned? It’s
not an issue of job security.” I didn’t
want to annoy the person who just hired me, but I thought, “Yes, I am; and yes,
it is.” That turned out precisely to be
the case. In Rollston’s case, Bob
Cargill has consistently brought up the issue that Emmanuel is acting against a
tenured person, and if that’s the case, what is tenure? It’s no surprise that the Kentucky courts
have recently
questioned whether seminaries can even have tenure.
Let me finish with two general thoughts
about these matters.
First,
we look like idiots, people. I have often conceded to outside observers
that this particular church tradition may look a little anti-intellectual
because it historically has been, in fact, anti-intellectual. This goes back at least to the Second Great
Awakening and probably before. But, I’ve
always also pointed to important scholars in the tradition who are functioning
at the highest critical level as exceptions.
When schools associated with the tradition are firing or disciplining people over these
types of publications, however (and again I acknowledge that I don’t know
everything about the Rollston affair, but the Huff Post article seems certainly
to be part of it), I don’t know that it can or should be defended. Let me take that back; I do know. It can’t and shouldn’t. The internet circus that has resulted in both
instances (and ironically to which I’m actively contributing now) is just as
embarrassing.
Second,
is there a crisis in E/evangelical Christianity on par with the
Modernist/Fundamentalist Debates? At first, I thought these were isolated
incidents. But then I started thinking
about Gundry and Pinnock and the nonsense of ETS, the famous Peter Enns affair
at WTS, these two incidences and several others. I, in fact, just this weekend heard of a
rising NT star at a theological school in Ohio being dismissed
unjustifiably. Is E/evangelical
Christianity tearing apart at the seams over critical thought again?
Oh my goodness; this can’t be happening.
We know this history. Why is it
doomed to repeat? I thought it worked
the other way around. I can’t help
feeling like all this gives up the hard ground that people like F. F. Bruce or
Joel Green worked over a career to establish—that it was possible to be a
churchman and a scholar.
And this raises the really important issue
that brings us back to my question about the role of historical Jesus studies,
or critical scholarship more generally, in theological education. It was actually a question about the role of
theological perspectives in critical scholarship. Are we really in a place where institutions
of theological education bow out of the critical discussion by terminating those participating in it, criticizing them, or perhaps failing to hire those capable of
participating in it for fear of a constituency?
Isn’t the discussion important enough that theological
institutions—whose very existence concerns precisely discussions such as “Who
is Jesus?” or “What is the Bible and what does it mean?”—should be an important voice in it?
Chris - Thanks for these reflections. You've echoed a lot of my own thoughts on the issue, as I also have come from a similar background. I don't have any good answers, other than simply waiting for the tides to change within these types of institutions. Change will come, but how many more decades it will take is open for discussion.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Chris. Point of correction/clarification: Dr. Rollston has not been officially dismissed as of yet.
ReplyDeleteThanks Tim, and thank for the clarification, Thom. I've amended the post to reflect this point. I assumed erroneously from the Cargill/Blowers exchange that some form of action had already taken place.
ReplyDeleteoh, rest assured, "some form of action had already taken place." but, to be technical, dr. rollston is still on payroll and teaching as of today.
ReplyDeleteThanks for this, Chris; keep at it.
ReplyDeleteChris, thanks for this lucid, well-written post. I agree wholeheartedly with your sentiment. Further, having been raised, trained, and ordained in the evangelical tradition (and having left for greener theological pastures), I find that I am often embarrassed of the anti-intellectualism that pervades the realm in which I still have many friends and family. Keep up the good work!
ReplyDeleteExcellent post, Chris. Well said.
ReplyDeleteAre you saying that Anthony Le Donne declined to identify himself as "a Christian"?
ReplyDeletePeter, no, that's not what I'm saying. At LCU, people must affirm the faith statement of the institution, and Anthony always did that. He publicly and privately identified himself as a believer. My point was that angry readers of his book were upset that he did not say in the book that he was a Christian.
DeleteThe cases are different. Rollston's essay certainly sounds like an attack on the Bible as a moral authority. I don't know if that is what was intended, but it's the effect. And journalism is different from scholarly writing.
ReplyDeleteFernando, thanks for this. I don't think you could describe Rollston's article as "journalism," though. Also, my point wasn't that there are no differences, but that there are important similarities.
DeleteThe problem isn't critical scholarship per se but evangelicalism's ongoing commitment to biblicism, which isn't compatible with historical-critical work on the biblical texts.
ReplyDeleteExactly here is the nub of the issue... and biblicism wins almost always, because donors are biblicists and, as such, are not fond of historical-critical work! Go figure.
DeleteI read the entire article and thought it pretty innocuous, descriptively highlighting and confronting a number of texts that most modern readers would find difficult. I was about to conclude that this is yet another scandalously unreasonable conservative storm in a teacup, when I the following sentence in the final paragraph lodged in my gullet: "After all, to embrace the dominant biblical view of women would be to embrace the marginalization of women." The writer assumes that this would naturally follow for any reasonable hermeneutic.
ReplyDeletePrecisely that, however, may be rather less obvious to institutional colleagues and donors training future ministers "to understand the Christian faith as it has been revealed in Scripture" (website). So I wonder if the concern has to do with the perceived public subversion of core corporate identity. That of course could land you in hot water in other lines of business too.
No, his view is that we, as Christians and as humans, should embrace the minority view of women in the Bible, which is to embrace liberation. Dominant/minority is value-neutral description. Some feminist scholars talk about a "remnant theology," in which the minority stands in judgment against the majority and sheds light on the dominant ideology. There is nothing in this at odds with Emmanuel's view of scripture. I was taught this sort of thing by numerous professors at Emmanuel, Rollston probably the least radical of them!
Delete
ReplyDeleteChristopher Rollstons's posts on Facebook have been a scholarly source of information on all types of work in the field of the ancient Near East, the Bible, excavations, etc. Why is a Christian Seminary so afraid of one article that appeared in the Huffington Post--the Seminary should be proud of Christopher Rollston instead of letting one man start an insanity.