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  • Michael Duduit
    May 2008
    It’s exciting for pastors and church leaders to see people coming to Christ on a regular basis through the ministry of their church....
  • Michael Duduit
    March 2008
    You see the brochures come across your desk, you read the email announcements, you hear ministry colleagues talk about a recent one...
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    In a study that resulted in our book Comeback Churches (BH Publishing), 324 comeback churches were surveyed in order to seek answers...
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    For many pastors, moving and transition can become a way of life. Beyond the ministerial issues of church transition, there are many...
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    As part of an experiment, I (Ed) encouraged all members of a 35- attendee congregation, which had a median age of 68 years, to visit...
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    January 2008
    Leaders and churches that are committed to speaking the truth in love learn that church discipline is part of the package. If we truly...
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    January 2008
    The constant, major challenge for any growing church, whether newly planted or established, is providing adequate facilities with which...
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"Cemetary" or "Seed House"
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"Cemetary" or "Seed House"
By J. Michael Shannon

This is a hard time for those who work in theological seminaries. Secular people view the theological seminary as a place where peo­ple discuss matters of little importance in the real world. Many of those who work in seminaries have heard the old joke in which someone says, “How are things going at the ‘cemetery?’ I’m sure that most of the time it is good natured ribbing, but sometimes it is an indication of what people really think about seminaries.

Even in some church circles, the seminary is devalued. Some ministerial entrepreneurs see the seminary as a place that refuses to change and does not teach the latest methods, or respond, to the latest trends. There are some ministers actually counseling fledgling ministers to avoid seminary altogether. I believe both of these assessments are unfair. Many seminaries today make great efforts to keep up with the latest trends — sometime embracing them, sometimes assessing them.

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What about the fledgling minister? How does this person view the seminary? Too often, it is seen as just a place to get a creden­tial. I remember with great pain something I said to a fellow sem­

 

 

inarian when I was involved in my first seminary experience. He mentioned the many intellectual and spiritual benefits he was receiving and I said, “I’m not worried about learning anything; I just want to get the sheepskin.” I don’t think I really believed that even at that time; I was just trying vainly to be funny. The fact is that I did not have the right motivation the first time I tried sem­inary, and I didn’t stay long. When I tried it the second time, my motive was much purer, and I completed my studies.

 

 

The fact is that any educational experience has value because it helps to make the student a certain kind of person. We don’t just take classes to learn a trade, although there’s nothing wrong with professional training. We take classes so that we might become more knowledgeable, competent and wiser people.

 

 

What can a seminary do for a preacher? For some of you who are reading these words, a seminary education is required for your ordination. That provides its own motivation. For others, a seminary education may be optional, but is seen as a benefit for ministry or academic advancement. Regardless of the reason for

 

 

38 Setp/Oct 2007

 

 

THE BENEFITS OF SEMINARY

 

 

going to seminary, it is the hope of all of us who labor there that the classes students take will make them better people as well as better ministers.

 

 

How does a seminary bless a preacher?

 

 

It deepens the preacher’s resources.

 

 

An older minister friend of mine used to say that “you better dig your well deep if you don’t want to suck mud.”

 

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