FC Missional Moment: Voices from the Commons
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Our Academic Pursuits - Embrace the Tough Mental Fight

Despite our ability to combine modesty and assertiveness in our "confident pluralism", we must be willing to embrace the challenge of working in a secular environment.  Nathan Hatch warns of a common temptation, one inevitable for Christians in a minority position within the academy:

Like children long rejected, evangelical scholars are still too anxious to be accepted by their peers, too willing to move only in directions that allow them to be ‘relevant.’ [The result is that] we have been far more inclined to speak up when our Christian convictions are in tune with the assumptions of modern academic life than when they are at odds. It is much easier, for instance, to set oneself in the vanguard of social progress than it is to defend those Christian assumptions that the established and fashionable intellectual circles of our day regard as obscurantist and fanciful. Yet it is this tougher mental fight that we must not avoid.

To avoid the temptation to value social acceptance over defending the Christian worldview requires we embrace a “[tough] mental fight.”

Towards the end of bringing a distinctive Christian perspective into a pluralistic university, we'd like to present the following questions one might consider when considering future research or teaching opportunities.  

In subsequent Missional Moments, we'll unpack these questions a few at a time.

  1. What is the meta-narrative of my discipline? Does this bring to light possible issues that need to be refuted, or modified, or advanced?
  2. What is the current meta-narrative of our culture? What needs to be encouraged, corrected, or redirected for the common good?
  3.  Are there opportunities to pursue a project or research that might be a blessing to the world?
  4. Is there a contemporary position that is in conflict with the gospel that needs to be responded to? Are there research or writing areas which might open doors to engage in gospel/Christian worldview conversations?
  5. Is there a substantive area in your discipline that you sense God is leading you to work on?
But first, we must address, in next week's Missional Moment, the common perspective that Jesus should be sequestered from true academic pursuits.  

--Rick Hove and Heather Holleman

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Our FC Missional Moments will continue their year-long invitation to A Grander Story. We're thankful for Rick Hove and Heather Holleman contributing to and editing their recently published book: A Grander Story.  We are also thankful for the many professors and Faculty Common's staff for their previous and current input to these Faculty Commons Missional Moments.
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This book is a celebration of our high calling as Christ followers on the university campus . . . Read this book to be uplifted, to find your place in God’s grand story, to know you are not alone, to integrate your faith and work, and to be equipped for ministry. Then give a copy to every Christian professor you know.–Charles M. C. Lee Moghadam Family Professor of Management Stanford Graduate School of Business


This year, we are hosting more regional conferences for faculty at various locations.  We are currently scheduling these remaining conferences:

Greenville, SC February 10,11
Orlando. FL February 10,11 
Athens, GA February 24, 25 
Palo Alto, CA April 8 
Moscow, ID toward the end of May 

Hear from other Christian professors who have honored Christ in their teaching, research, and service.

Explore with other Christian faculty our common call to the university and the world.

Network with colleagues from other universities.

Share ideas of effective ministry.

Graduate students welcome.

Recent endorsement:  The Common Call Conferences have provided me with a unique opportunity to network with Christian faculty representing a variety of disciplines and institutions and to gain useful insights to integrating my faith with my academic life.--Dr. David M. Nelson, Professor of Economics, Western Washington University

A Common Call Conference

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