Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Kuyper on the ‘Sacred Calling’ of Scholarship
Kuyper on the ‘Sacred Calling’ of Scholarship
Sep 29, 2024 12:18 PM

The church has found a renewed interest in matters of “faith-work integration,” but while we hear plenty about following the voice of God in business and entrepreneurship, we hear very little about the world of academia.What does it mean, as a Christian, to be called to the work of scholarship?

In Scholarship, a newly released collection of convocation addresses by Abraham Kuyper, we find a strong example of the type of reflection we ought to promote and embrace. For Kuyper, the call to academic life is a “sacred calling,” one that demands wise and creative stewardship of the mind and a Christianly posture and position that connects with each other area of the Christian life.

Although the Economy of Wisdom may differ from other spheres in its emphases and modes of operation, those of us called thereto are at a fundamental level propelled by the very same stewardship mandate: be fruitful, multiply, and replenish the earth through truth, knowledge, and wisdom.

As Kuyper explains, the scholar’s very mind is his “field of labor,” one that must be cultivated actively and attentively:

In your mind lies your glory as scholars. That is your field of labor. Not merely to live, but to know that you live and how you live, and how things around you live, and how all that hangs together and lives out of the one efficient cause that proceeds from God’s power and wisdom. Other people, when evening falls, have to have sown and plowed, counted and calculated; but you have to have thought, reflected, analyzed, until at last a harvest of your own thoughts may germinate and ripen on the field of your consciousness.

You too for your part must feel called to be a nurseryman in this consecrated garden. And if others plant a cedar or a vine while you perhaps make only cuttings of lilac or hyssop, that does not matter. Even mint, dill, and cumin belong to the plant world. Just as long as something is growing, and as long as that something is not a weed.

Or, as he puts it in another analogy:

The pseudostudent builds a house of blocks, like a child, and when he has finished it he puts the blocks back in the box. The true student builds a proper house and takes care that his studies are done properly: the beams have to be real beams, the iron bolts of real iron and not of tin, and the cornerstone a real stone that can bear the necessary weight. This causes him to develop a sense of what is truth. Not guessing at it, and by ing up with a tolerable answer. Not bragging and showing off with what is not asked and what is not relevant. But really knowing what you know. Every argument a genuine argument. Every opinion an opinion that has merit. Checking every link in a chain of ideas to see whether the argument is watertight.

After all, the man of science does not play fast and loose with the facts, but it is granted him to track down the gold of God’s thoughts, the gems of divine wisdom, a labor that requires real discernment. Then you may at times know much less than the braggart and look shabby next to the dandy; but is the woman who can adorn her throat with one real diamond not richer than the trollop from the music hall who has bedecked her bosom with the glitter of costume jewelry?

For those of us called to the work of scholarship, how then ought we to study and search? How do we order our lives, allegiances, obligations, and desires in a way that glorifies God?What is our delight,” as Kuyper puts it? Are we striving after our own thoughts for our own self-serving purposes, or are we searching to uncover God’s truth, so that we might glorify, honor, serve, and obey him in all that we do?

For more, purchase Scholarship: Two Convocation Addresses on University Life, or grab For the Life of the World, which includes an entire episode on the Economy of Wisdom.

[product sku=”1441″]

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
‘Dark Money’ – A Shaggy Dog Story
“Dark money” sounds menacing and foreboding – a financial nomenclature suggestive of gothic masterpieces like “The Raven” and “The Black Cat.” Whereas Poe’s tales actually contain sinister elements, the phrase dark money is employed by activist shareholders much like the villains of countless “Scooby Doo” cartoons devised illusory ghosts, werewolves and vampires. The evildoers wanted to scare those meddlesome Mystery Machine kids from nefarious moneymaking schemes. The anti-capitalism messages of “Scooby Doo” are repeated by those ominously intoning the perceived...
Mike Rowe on Higher Education and ‘Vocational Consolation Prizes’
Ever since the cancellation of Discovery Channel’s hit show Dirty Jobs, former host Mike Rowe has been spreading his message more directly, challenging Americans on how they approach work and success. As Jordan Ballor has already noted, much of Rowe’s critique centers on the current state of higher education. In a recent appearance on The Blaze, Rowe offers a bit more color on this, pointing to the growing disconnect between skills and needs and wondering what it says about our...
Challenging the Government Monopoly on Social Welfare
During the government shutdown billionaire philanthropists Laura and John Arnold gave $10 million to the National Head Start Association to keep the program for e children running. Mr. Arnold made it clear, however, that he did not believe this was a permanent solution, as “private dollars cannot in the long term replace mitments.” But some people thought Arnold’s generosity itself undermined the government’s power. As The Nation’s Amy Schiller said, “The entire shutdown is undergirded by a fantasy of a...
Federal Court Says Obamacare Mandate ‘Trammels’ Religious Freedom
The delivery trucks of Ohio-based Freshway Foods bear signs stating, “It’s not a choice, it’s a child,” as a way to publicly promote the owners’ pro-life views to the public. It wasn’t too surprising, then, that pany and it’s owners, Francis and Philip Gilardi, would be opposed to the Obamacare’s requirement that the health coverage for their nearly 400 full-time workers include abortifacients. The American Center for Law and Justice helped the Gilardi’s challenge the mandate, arguing that the mandate...
Christians Need to Get Their Hands Dirty
To avoid the “twin errors of materialism and spiritualism” Christians need to mix it up with the “dirtiness” of this world, Jordan Ballor argues in Get Your Hands Dirty: Essays on Christian Social Thought (And Action). The Christian Post recently interviewed Jordan about his new book: CP: What is “dirt” a metaphor for in the book? Ballor:It’s a multi-layered metaphor. On one level, it’s just about grit, the things that attend to hard work – sweat, toil and mud –...
HHS Lawsuit, Round Two: Healthcare.gov ‘Fail’
A new lawsuit against the federal government has been filed regarding the HHS mandate. The Williams family (father Joseph III, sons Joseph IV and Mark) own Electrolock, an electrical and thermal pany based in Ohio. The Williams family, as Catholics, believe the government’s mandate to provide abortions, artificial birth control and abortifacients to their employees as part of health care violates their religious liberty. According to The Thomas More Law Center, the family decided to give employees money so that...
MyCancellation.com: An ObamaCare Website that Works
From the folks at Independent Women’s Voice: Can’t keep your health care plan? Received a cancellation letter? We know that ObamaCare is causing this happen to people all across America — your family, your friends, your co-workers, your employees. Maybe even you. Washington needs to see what is happening. That’s why Independent Women’s Voice launched a new Tumblr site — — and we are looking for submissions from the millions across the country who have received cancellation letters from their...
Religious Left’s Mendacious, Deceptive, Astro-Turfing Kabuki Dance at the SEC
The Securities and Exchange Commission conducted a hearing Wednesday to determine whether it should promulgate new disclosure rules for panies. On hand was Laura Berry, executive director, the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility, a New York-based watchdog group. Ms. Berry was joined by a host of other liberal/progressive representatives working hard to undermine First Amendment rights bolstered by the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2010 decision in Citizens United. Berry and her cohorts – Sen. Robert Menendez (D-NJ); Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.);...
Samuel Gregg: ‘Welcome To The New Corporatism’
features a piece from Acton’s Director of Research Sam Gregg today regarding Americans’ distrust of the federal government. While disdain for politicians is nothing new, Gregg says there is something beyond simple dislike for political shenanigans: There is, however, another dimension to this problem that’s now receiving more attention. This is the emergence over the past two decades of what the 2006 Nobel Laureate Edmund Phelps calls in his new book, Mass Flourishing, the “new corporatism.” This is a set...
Ever Heard of a Tea Party Catholic?
At Public Discourse, Nathan Shlueter takes an unusual approach in his review of Acton’s Director of Research Sam Gregg’s Tea Party Catholic — it’s a memo to the faculty of Georgetown University as written by Sen. Paul Ryan: As Gregg’s book makes clear, defending market economies does not make one a libertarian. And, in fact, no libertarian or Randian egoist would approve of my budget plan, which—whether you agree with it or not—is a sincere attempt to preserve and improve...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved