Seminary

 

Jan

21

2008

Trevin Wax|4:05 am CT

Cloud of Witnesses: James P. Boyce
Cloud of Witnesses: James P. Boyce avatar

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James Petigru Boyce (1827-88)

James P. Boyce was the founder and the first president of The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary (1859-88). His Abstract of Systematic Theology was the foundational textbook of theology for Southern Seminary for decades after his death and is still in print today.

James P. BoyceWhen I think back to the example left by Boyce, I am encouraged by his devotion to the local church. He taught Bible classes at Broadway Baptist Church for many years. He was a firm believer in giving ministers of the gospel a sound theological education.

It would be foolish of me to spend this week glorifying Southern’s forefathers as if they were all saintly heroes. Boyce agreed with many of his fellow Southern Baptists that slavery was acceptable. But lest we consider ourselves more righteous and holy today, let us be remember that we all have problems in applying the gospel we proclaim.

If anything, Boyce would agree that he should not be held in high esteem. Praise is reserved for Jesus himself. We are sinners. He is the Savior. And yet, we today are surrounded by a cloud of witnesses - those sinner/saints who have gone before us, doing their best to live faithfully the gospel of God’s saving grace.

One of Boyce’s students recounts the following conversation:

‘We heard the greatest sermon of our lives today.”
“Who preached it?”
“Jim Peter” (Boyce)
“What was his text?”
“God”
“What was his theme?”
“God”
“What were the divisions of the discourse?”
“God”

May the same be said of us.

 
 

Jan

19

2008

Trevin Wax|3:05 am CT

Cloud of Witnesses: Southern Seminary
Cloud of Witnesses: Southern Seminary avatar

boyce-tall-web.jpgA student cannot walk the campus of Southern Seminary without experiencing a deep appreciation and awe for the history contained in the seminary’s 150-year existence. As the Southern Baptist Convention’s oldest theological institution, Southern Seminary has consistently set the standard for quality academics and well-known faculty.

During my most recent visit to Louisville, a friend of mine, Robbie Sagers, took me to took me to Cave Hill, a cemetery that serves as the resting place for six of the Seminary’s nine presidents (Dr. Whitsitt is buried elsewhere, Dr. McCall is living today in Florida, and President Mohler will hopefully be leading Southern Seminary for many decades to come) and famous past professors – resting, that is, until Jesus returns. This week, I’d like to reflect upon the time we spent in the cemetery – celebrating the lives of some of Southern Seminary’s forefathers.

Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with endurance, the race that is set before us… – Hebrews 12:1

 
 

Aug

21

2007

Trevin Wax|12:03 am CT

Let Grace Abound in Us, Fellow Seminary Students
Let Grace Abound in Us, Fellow Seminary Students avatar

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It is an exciting time to be a student at Southern Seminary. We are privileged to sit at the feet of some of the most gifted, world-renowned scholars on the planet. The seminary is growing by leaps and bounds. Our president hosts a daily radio program and is respected by Christians and non-Christians alike. We are treated to some of the greatest preachers inside and outside Southern Baptist life. The resurgence of Reformed theology has revitalized our missionary and evangelistic endeavors, as we follow in the footsteps of the Baptist forerunners of the modern missions movement.

God has blessed us through Southern Seminary, and we pray he is preparing us to be a blessing to our Convention in return. But it is during times of greatest blessing and success that we are often most vulnerable to temptation.

Consider Joseph, tempted after he began managing Pharoah’s affairs.
David, tempted after he had become a military hero.
Elijah, tempted to despair after he called down fire from heaven on Mt. Carmel.
Jesus, tempted in the wilderness after his baptism and God’s heavenly affirmation of his identity. 

Cornelius Plantinga, Jr. in Not the Way It’s Supposed to Be: A Breviary of Sin writes:

“The parasitic nature of sin accounts for certain facts that otherwise puzzle us. It accounts for the fact that in various complicated and ironic ways, good and evil keep showing up, and even growing up together… How peculiar, then, that sin multiplies right along with goodness… Sin is fruitful just because, like a virus, it attaches the life force and dynamics of its host.”

If we are not careful, brothers, our passion for God’s glory, enthusiasm for evangelism and our love for his Church could be overshadowed by pride. Satan would love nothing more than to transform our joy of attending one of the best seminaries in the world into an intellectual snobbery that renders us ineffective in ministry. We must guard our hearts against this paralyzing pride. Weeds grow next to the flowers. The flowers are blooming among Southern’s best. The question is: will we choke out the weeds of pride in our hearts or will the weeds choke out a lifetime of fruitfulness?

Where might this pride surface?

We might be tempted, as we react against the pragmatic “whatever works to get them in the door” mentality of other ministers, to reject any pragmatic application-focused teaching whatsoever. We might buy into the idea that right theology automatically leads to right practice. We might take our place in a long line of churches with good, orthodox theology failing to be salt and light in the world. Can we not nullify the intention of God’s Word while upholding its inerrancy? 

We might be tempted, as we react against some of the legalistic excesses of previous generations, to believe that proponents of alcohol abstinence are just a throwback to an outdated temperance movement, and that the drinkers are the truly enlightened ones who have discovered “moderation.” But is abstinence from alcohol (I like calling it a “boycott,” as my position on the issue resembles John Piper’s and Charles Spurgeon’s) a new “Law” that threatens our freedom in Christ? And is this a hill on which to die? 

We might be tempted, as we grapple with the implications of our freedom in Christ, to simply replace some “laws” with others. In an overreaction against entertainment-based preaching, you might be tempted to outlaw all humor in the pulpit. In an overreaction against manipulative evangelists, you might be tempted to do away with all altar calls. We might be tempted to stop reading or engaging in serious dialogue with other writers outside of the Reformed stream, except to prove them wrong. And then legalism rears its ugly head when the presence of different authors on your bookshelf makes you theologically “suspect.”

We might be tempted to enforce a reform of our churches, rather than lead churches into reformation gracefully. So, we must maintain humility in everything, for…

  • Reform will not come about if pride causes us to look down on well-intentioned believers who have a vibrant faith in Jesus but not as much theological education as we do.
  • Reform will not come about by seeking to institute church discipline and other major changes within the first year.
  • Reform will not come from students and ministers that are too proud to submit to the leadership of other believers, yes even believers from different theological streams.
  • Reform will not come by embracing good theology at the expense of loving our neighbors.
  • Reform will not come to our churches if we wind up replacing the intellectual snobbery of “Old Southern’s” liberalism with the intellectual snobbery “New Southern’s” Calvinism.

Brothers, temptation to pride will come. And pride, if given free reign in our lives, will abort any attempt to reform our churches.

Before we can reform the Church, we must serve the Church.

Before we serve the Church, we must love the Church.

Before we can love the Church, we must abandon any and all pockets of pride that would keep us from leaving the lofty pedestal of our theology and getting dirty by serving with and for the “uneducated,” “uncultured,” but Jesus-loving people in our denomination.

Let us be on guard, brothers. The Enemy would love nothing more than to see the renewal of conservative theology at Southern transform our seminary into an enclave of arrogant snobbery.

May we pray like the Puritans:

“Defend me from assailing foes, from evil circumstances, from myself. My adversaries are part and parcel of my nature; my enemy is within the citadel. Come with almighty power and cast him out, pierce him to death, and abolish in me every particle of carnal life this day.”

My brothers in Christ, let us show others the grace we most fervently espouse.

Crossposted at SaidatSouthern

written by Trevin Wax  © 2007 Kingdom People blog

 
 

Jul

07

2007

Trevin Wax|7:49 pm CT

Off to Seminary… Round 2
Off to Seminary… Round 2 avatar

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Rough weekend. Today, we drove Corina’s parents back to the Atlanta airport (about 9 hours total on the road today), and at 4:40 p.m. they left to go back to Romania. It’s been wonderful having them visit us these past few weeks… but all good things must come to an end. What’s tough is not knowing when we’ll see them again.

Tomorrow afternoon, I’ll be heading to Louisville for 5 days for another J-term. This one is on “The Reformation” with Dr. Shawn Wright. The reading for this class has been a killer. I’ve read more for this class than for several regular classes combined. Not that it hasn’t been good or interesting – it’s just been a lot. And when reading assignments overwhelm me (an avid reader), you know it’s bad!

Every time I’m on Southern’s campus, I’m struck by the feeling of “history” within the walls. For almost 150 years now, Southern has been training pastors, and I’m honored to take my humble place in the footsteps of many prominent Baptist leaders from the past.

I’m blessed to be in seminary, to be a minister of the gospel in a fantastic church, to be married to a wonderful woman and father to a terrific three-year-old. 

Last time I was in Louisville, I was able to meet some of you, my readers or fellow bloggers. Those meetings were the highlights of my week, so if you’re in the Louisville area and want to meet, don’t hesitate to write.   

 
 

Jun

19

2007

Trevin Wax|4:06 am CT

The Guilt of a Seminarian
The Guilt of a Seminarian avatar

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Seminarians deal with a lot of guilt. And almost nobody wants to talk about it.

As I look back at the year-and-a-half I spent in Louisville as a full-time student, I am beginning to realize just how guilty I felt for much of the time.

Now, you may ask: why would a seminary student feel guilty about anything? After all, seminarians have answered the call that God has placed on their lives. Seminary students are training for ministry and missions. Seminarians are hearing good Bible teaching all the time.

Yes, it’s hard to imagine why a seminarian would battle feelings of guilt when we are considering only the seminary education. The guilt doesn’t come from the great education. It comes from life circumstances.

Ministry or No-Ministry Guilt
Seminary students don’t want to just be sponges soaking in teaching without having an outlet to teach and minister to others. So most of us go looking for ministry positions in local churches. We want to serve! Sadly, most of the churches in the immediate area are seminary-saturated. So what does this mean? You probably aren’t going to find a church close-by that will pay you to serve.

This causes one of two problems. Some students decide they want to serve, no matter the cost. But because of family demands, work schedules, and the school work load, the student discovers that serving with no pay winds up costing a lot more than expected. The ministry eats up the last remaining moments of family life. The other problem is that the student turns down good ministry opportunities because his plate is already too full.

So the seminarian deals with guilt on two fronts. We feel guilty because we have said “no” to ministry opportunities in order to not sacrifice our families. Or we feel guilty because we have said “yes” to non-paying ministry opportunities that suck the remaining life out of our already tired bodies. Either way, you’ve got it. Guilt for not serving. Or guilt for serving.

Church-sponsored or No-sponsored Guilt
Another area of guilt comes from church sponsorships. Unfortunately, most Southern Baptist churches do very little in actually helping specific students get through seminary (except through the funding of the Cooperative Program, which thankfully is a big help.) We talk a big talk about “sending people into ministry,” but see little personal investment in preparing people that are going out and away and probably not coming back. So, most seminary students have to seek financial support elsewhere: friends, family, scholarships.
Continue

 
 

Jun

17

2007

Trevin Wax|1:30 pm CT

Off to Louisville
Off to Louisville avatar

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Tomorrow morning, I head to Louisville, KY for a J-term at Southern Seminary. The class is “The Ministry of Leadership” and the required reading has been fantastic. I’m looking forward to getting back on campus for some classes, even if I am now one of those “distance” learners.

My sister and brother-in-law live not far from campus, so it will be good to stay with them and have some quality time – if there is any time, what with the studying and tests and all. I don’t look forward to spending 4 nights away from my wife and son, but I know it will fly by.

I’ll still be posting this week, even from Louisville. In the works is a 4-part review of a book on leadership and teaching, plus a post called “The Guilt of the Seminarian.”

 
 

Jun

12

2007

Trevin Wax|9:13 am CT

Emanuel University Breakfast
Emanuel University Breakfast avatar

 

Corina and I just returned from the Emanuel University-sponsored breakfast here at the Convention. It is exciting to see the support and backing for my alma mater in Romania. It was also humbling to meet some pillars of our denomination - Paige Patterson, Johnny Hunt, Ted Traylor, and Keith Thomas – and to see them so supportive of an institution thousands of miles away. These men and the other faithful Baptists who are supporting Emanuel are praying to see God use this university to impact Eastern Europe and beyond with the gospel.

Paul Negrut, the president of the university, asked me as a graduate to address the people gathered there. I thanked them for supporting Emanuel and investing in the spiritual life of Romania. Though many young people are leaving Romania for work in other countries and though the old way of life seems to be fading, we continue on with hope. We are a Resurrection people. If businessmen see the worth of investing economically in Romania (which they do), surely we as the Church should see the value in spiritual investment. The seeds being planted now at Emanuel will blossom and bring forth fruit for the decades to come, impacting Eastern Europe and beyond.

I’m excited to see what God is doing through Emanuel and I look forward to seeing how God will use this great institution in the future.

 
 

Jun

01

2007

Trevin Wax|6:38 am CT

Official Launch of "Said@Southern"
Official Launch of "Said@Southern" avatar

SaidatSouthern.com has been launched. There is no better place to find a collection of blogs from Southern Seminary students, professors, and alumni. I encourage you to visit the site, add it to your Favorites list, and begin savoring the insights coming out of Southern Seminary right now.

 
 

May

10

2007

Trevin Wax|6:43 am CT

The Upside-Down Resume
The Upside-Down Resume avatar

bxp126607.jpgHave you ever felt as if you were swimming upstream against a current of paperwork?When I plunged into the seminary application river, I expected an invigorating swim. Instead, I was swept away by the details that flooded my mind as I sought to enhance my résumé. Two weeks later, I finally managed to wade ashore, soaking wet, but triumphantly clinging to a single sheet listing all my shining achievements and spiritual victories. Yet before I had fully savored the moment of accomplishment, the Holy Spirit quietly reminded me of the utter frailty of my good deeds in comparison to the Savior’s cross. Suddenly, my mindset was turned upside-down, and the paper that listed my triumphs crumpled into a soggy mess.

The Gospels describe Jesus overturning the common everyday expectations of His world. The Kingdom of God belongs to the poor and persecuted, not the rich and coddled; the meek inherit the earth, not the strong and pushy. Those who are crying out for justice will be satisfied; those laughing at others’ expense will soon cry.

Even today, Jesus’ upside-down kingdom still flips our way of thinking. And that is why, as I perused my sparkling résumé, I couldn’t help but wonder if maybe I had gone about citing my accomplishments the wrong way. Followers of Jesus boast not in their strengths, but in their weaknesses.

So, I asked myself… what if I sent in a different résumé – one that better reflected the upside down way of life that Jesus lived and preached? What if I crossed out all my spiritual accomplishments and instead listed my failures, my hurts, doubts and times of disillusion? Would I still make it into seminary? Probably not. After all, my résumé is just one in a hundred – each representing a serious student competing to gain admission to seminary. If I’m going to get in, my accomplishments have to stand out.

But in 2 Corinthians 11, Paul fills out a résumé that completely goes against what anyone would expect. Would he have made it into seminary?

In Paul’s day, when Roman armies attacked a city, the soldiers either forced the gate or used ladders to hurdle the wall. Of course, the enemy threw down anything and everything (rocks, boiling oil, etc) to prevent the invaders from gaining victory. Just making it over the wall and into the city demonstrated a truly heroic feat. The first soldier to accomplish this death-defying act of bravery would receive the corona muralis (“the crown of the wall”).

In Paul’s upside-down résumé, we read about the time he managed to go over the city wall. Except that in his case, he wasn’t victoriously entering the city to claim it for the King. Rather, he was fleeing the city, under the cover of darkness, by being lowered over the wall in a basket. Here is the great Apostle Paul, frightened and cowering in a basket, hoping to escape the city before being caught and executed.

Paul’s self-written letter of recommendation continues, but he doesn’t boast of his accomplishments. He cites beatings, shipwrecks, public humiliation, imprisonment, and the time God seemingly abandoned him to drift in the sea for a whole day and night. He speaks of the dangers posed by fellow Jews, Christian hypocrites and common thieves. He mentions exhaustion, hunger and poverty. Is this the victorious Christian life that God promised? Where is his list of achievements? Where is his sense of pride of all that God has done through him?

If his letter of recommendation is going to convince the Corinthians that he is a true apostle and that the “sparkling” apostles who are disturbing the church are indeed false, then he better come up with a more impressive résumé than this! After all, if he’s going to assert his apostolic authority, he had better prove to his people that he’s a true apostle.

And somehow, that’s the whole point. Paul (tongue-in-cheek, of course) lists his weaknesses, hardships and failures in order to prove that he is a true apostle and the “super-apostles” handing out letters of recommendation shinier than his are in fact the fakes. Being a follower of Jesus and a citizen of His upside-down kingdom means that what would normally be held up as worthy of praise and proof of authority is struck down, and what would normally be considered shameful and proof of failure is put up in its place.

I doubt Jeremiah would have made it into seminary. After all, he preached for a whole generation and never saw a single convert. What about Elijah? Oh yes, he had that shining moment on Mount Carmel, but that was right before he fled into the desert grouchy, depressed, and suicidal. Would Moses have made it in? Background checks would have ousted his chances because of manslaughter. Surely Job would have been accepted into seminary. His story is the picture-perfect “He has made me glad” example of the Christian life, isn’t it? (Well, at least he might have qualified for a low or no-income scholarship.) I doubt the admission staff would have even considered Timothy the Timid or Joseph the Jailbird.

And then there’s Jesus. The self-proclaimed Messiah of Israel faced temptation in the wilderness, agonized over His future while suffering in the garden, and burst into tears before making His grand entrance into Jerusalem. The King of Israel received a crown all right, – one full of thorns that only added to the agony and shame of Roman crucifixion, the most embarrassing and revolting form of execution ever devised.

Ultimately, it is the cross that turns the world’s wisdom upside-down. We Christians hold up that ancient form of torture as our most beloved symbol of victory. It was in His excruciating death that Jesus was reconciling the world to God. It was in the suffering and lashes of Roman whips that Paul was putting on display God’s Gospel for the world to see. It is in our weaknesses that God’s strength becomes crystal clear.

Followers of Christ cannot prove their authenticity by listing merits down a page and hoping to be accepted by fellow believers. The marks of our Savior were nail scars in his hands and feet. The mark of the apostle was the whip-induced tearing of the flesh on the back. The mark of Jesus’ follower is the suffering one endures after taking up the cross and following.

Why should we forget that following Christ means going His way? The crown that interested Paul wasn’t the “crown of the wall” awarded by the Roman generals, but the crown of Christ, the reward from the crucified and risen Lord of the world. Somehow, it is through our suffering, our shame, our weakness and seeming failures that God makes visible the image of His Son.

I looked down at all the paperwork on my desk. My résumé seemed superficial and self-centered compared to Paul’s. Maybe that’s because I have too often failed to live in such a way that my actions would stand the world’s wisdom and thought processes on their head – the Kingdom way – the upside down, or should I say, right-side-up way that Jesus lived. I want to be like Paul, not so concerned about showing off my earthly crowns of success and ready instead to wear the crown of thorns that truly models the life of my Savior.

written by Trevin Wax  © 2007 Kingdom People blog, an abbreviated version of this article was first published in Southern Seminary newspaper The Towers, July 24, 2006.

 
 

May

08

2007

Trevin Wax|1:47 pm CT

New Site for Said at Southern
New Site for Said at Southern avatar

The guys at Said at Southern have moved to their official site: http://saidatsouthern.com/

Said at Southern features blogs from Southern Seminary students, news for the Southern community, and commentary from faculty members. Tony Kummer, Timmy Brister, and Owen Strachan (three fellow MDiv students) have done a terrific job putting this site together and bringing on board other Southern students who blog (like myself). I have no doubt this site is going to be very popular.

Make sure you update your favorites to include Said at Southern!