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Phelan Addresses Faculty of North Park Institutions

Chicago, IL (August 30, 2005) - Last week, Dr. John E. Phelan Jr. addressed faculty members at North Park University and North Park Theological Seminary as both institutions began classes for the new academic year.

Pelan is president and dean of the seminary and is one of three individuals serving an interim presidency role at the university during the search for a new president. Phelan also is a regular contributor to The Covenant Companion with his "Markings" column. Following is the text of his remarks for the interest of our readers.

By Dr. John E. Phelan Jr.

Nearly every day when I am on campus, I now walk across the great seal at the center of the campus. Inscribed on that seal are the words of the North Park University motto: "In Thy Light Shall We See Light." The phrase is from Psalm 36:9. The Psalm speaks of God's enduring love for his creation and for all people. "You Lord," sings the psalmist, "preserve both people and animals. How priceless is your unfailing love, O God!" God is praised as the abundant source of all that is needed for earthly life. "With you," the psalmist concludes, "is the fountain of life; in your light we see light." How did this motto come to be chosen? What did it mean then and what does it mean now more than 100 years after it was selected?

According to Erland Carlsson's History of North Park College about a month after the fledgling school started classes, there was "a festivity of welcome for the public." There were "devotions" by Prof. M. E. Peterson of Chicago Theological Seminary and no less than two sermons - one by President Nyvall and one by Rev. Swen Anderson. A brand new choir delighted the congregation with music. And then there was an address by Prof. Risberg, a pioneer Swedish American theological educator who had sought, unsuccessfully, to draw the immigrant Swedes who would form the Evangelical Covenant Church into the congregational fold.

Carlsson Risberg's address was entitled "God's Light in the School." He told the audience that he had seen in Hernosand, Sweden, "a new school building on the fa�ade of which were written the words, 'In Thy Light Shall We See Light.' Applying the illustration to the audience," Carlsson continues, " Professor Risberg urged his listeners to accept in heart and mind this motto so that everything they studied would be considered in the light of God's light." So impressed were school officials with Risberg's address that they selected the text as the school's motto.

Light, of course, is one of the most obvious and common metaphors for spiritual, moral, and intellectual learning and growth. It is typical to speak of ignorance, immorality and incompetence as darkness and learning, spiritual flowering, and intellectual awakening as enlightenment. In the Bible, God is frequently seen as the source of light. His word will lead from darkness and death to light and life. "Your word," reads Psalm 119, "is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path." That both God and God's message shed light and life on a world of darkness and death is a consistent message of the Christian community.

The Gospels, especially the Gospel of John, take a further step. According to John 1, God's light is now personified. The "Word" who was with God and was God according to John 1:1 is now "the true light that gives light to everyone." This light has come into the world. Jesus himself declares in John 8:12, "I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness but will have the light of life." According to John's Gospel, the light of God is not simply found in intellectual or spiritual information, as important as these are, but in a person. For Christians, Jesus of Nazareth is a window into the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. He sheds light on God as he sheds light on the world.

So what does this mean at the beginning of a new year of teaching and learning, of administrating and supporting? From the beginning, North Park has been about more than relaying information to students and enhancing their skills - as important as those things are. For North Park, our students are not here simply to improve their job prospects or even become enlightened intellectuals. Our students, we believe, whether they know it or not, are on a spiritual and intellectual quest. We believe the decisions students make matter. We believe this spiritual and intellectual quest can lead to light and life or darkness and death. This is, in part, what we mean by calling our students to a life of "significance and service." We want their lives to be more than self-indulgent searches for pleasure, position and power. We rather believe that God has provided the creational superstructure. We either build on this or destroy it. We either shine the light of love and hope on it or keep it in gloom and misery. Our students will either be involved in God's work of restoration, renewal, and reconciliation or in the continuing dissolution of the world into violence, hate, and destruction.

In Psalm 36 the psalmist speaks of God's "love, faithfulness, righteousness, and justice." These are not indefinable abstractions but are given content and meaning by God and seen clearly in Jesus Christ. These are virtues that produce personal and communal transformation - they are light and life-giving virtues. Rowan Greer argues that the real sources of truth are "truthful lives." A life of virtue, a life of moral integrity, a life that recognizes and accepts powerful communal responsibilities is a prerequisite to spiritual and intellectual illumination. We call our students to lives of significance and service, to lives of virtue and wholeness as a means to spiritual and intellectual illumination. We insist that how they live and, indeed, how we live is important.

For we are called to the same set of divine virtues: love, faithfulness, righteousness and justice. We are also called to "truthful lives." As a Christian school, we agree with Greer that truth is located in "the revelation of the triune God in the story of Christ's incarnate life, death and resurrection and in that of Scripture." Whether we teach biology or Bible, calculus or church history, we are all about spiritual formation, we are all committed to a life formed by the virtues. We are as concerned about who are students are and who they are becoming as what they know. We certainly honor the variety of traditions and commitments of all of our students, whether they are Christians or Muslim or of no particular religious commitment. But we want to challenge them with the light by which we see light. We want them to wrestle with spiritual and intellectual illumination. We want them to live lives of significance and service - lives of virtue.

We want them to see something they have never seen in the life of Jesus, even if at the end they go their own way.

There are plenty of places students can go if they are interested in nothing more than an individualistic and self-indulgent quest. There are plenty of schools that would smirk at the notion of college education as a spiritual and intellectual quest. There are very few schools that can do and be what we can do and be. We are a place deeply rooted in the evangelical tradition that permits students and faculty from a wide variety of traditions to gather and share their quests, their love of God and learning, and to bask in that light that gives light. We do this together by wrestling together with the great texts, traditions and questions and by living truthful lives.

In a school as diverse as ours, this is not easy. We are sometimes hesitant to discuss these issues, even among ourselves. We can easily grow angry or silent in the face of our differences as faculty and staff, let alone our differences as faculty, staff and students. But if we cannot discuss such important matters without sneering at and silencing the other, whoever they may be, how will we expect out students to do so? I have been impressed in recent years by the work of Rene Girard. To grossly oversimplify Girard's thought, he argues that the source of human culture was a process of "scapegoating." When a community is about to be overwhelmed by violence and hatred, Girard argues, over and over again a "scapegoat" is selected - perhaps an individual or group of individuals. The blame for the violence is laid on them and they are persecuted, driven from the community or killed. A temporary peace ensues before the cycle is repeated.

Our society is nearly overwhelmed by scapegoating. It is very attractive. It keeps us from having to think too much. If the liberals are to blame or the fundamentalists or the Christians or the Muslims or the Jews or the Democrats or Republicans or - fill in the blank - I don't have to think too much. I can sneer at and despise the other and avoid conversation with them. They can be seen as irredeemably evil and easily ignored.

How can we avoid this? If in our diversity we can remain committed to seeing light in the light of God, if we can manifest the virtues of love, faithfulness, righteousness and justice, if can respect and hear one another, we can become something special. We can be a place where the most important questions are engaged without our descending into sneering and scapegoating. We can live "truthful lives" and call our students to do so.

This is my challenge for myself and for you this year: to stand in the light of God; to live truthful lives - lives of love, faithfulness, righteousness and justice; to lay aside the scapegoating and listen and learn - and teach. I trust this will be a wonderful year for all of you.

Copyright © 2008 The Evangelical Covenant Church.

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