Only the Ignorant Say "I Know"

Okay, first off please don’t take the title literally. I am not saying anyone is ignorant, other than me. The title is just meant to be something catchy. Did it work?

Second, I’ve found a new podcast that I enjoy listening to. It is called “Philopsophize This” and it has been quite good thus far. During one of the episodes it mentioned what is known as the Socratic paradox. The paradox is that Socrates said that he knew one thing that others around him didn’t and all of his wisdom came from that one source of knowledge. What was this knowledge? According to Plato Socrates constantly described it this way.

“I know one thing: that I know nothing”

If you think about his Socratic method of learning through constant questioning this makes perfect sense. Acknowledging how little I know is a great starting place, no matter how much I actually know. In fact, the people I know who are really experts on a subject usually are the ones who seem to acknowledge how little they actually know about the subject they are an expert in.

It always scares me a little when a person constantly responds with “I know” during a conversation. It concerns me even more when I find myself wanting to respond with “I know.” Why do I feel the need to say that? Saying “I know” kills conversation. Saying “I don’t know” or even better nothing encourages conversation. It encourages learning. It opens doors rather than shutting them. Pride pushes for me to try and prove to someone that I know something. Humility encourages me to learn from everyone and assume that I don’t know as much as I think I do.

I think this is just as true of faith as it is anything else. Admitting how little I know produces reliance upon Jesus, whereas thinking I know a good bit produces pride and self-reliance. I hope today I realize that I know nothing.

Want to be a Pastor? Then don't go to Bible College

One of the things that I am very thankful for in my education is that I did not attend a Bible college for my undergraduate degree. Obviously I am not opposed to formal religious education because I have earned my masters degree from a Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary and hopefully I will soon earn my doctorate from New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary. So here is why I think young ministers if at all possible should not go to religious colleges for their undergraduate degrees. I say this with an understanding that most protestant churches are now looking for a minimum of a masters degree from their ministers. If you are going to just get a bachelor’s degree and your denomination/church affiliation will accept that, then what I am writing doesn’t really pertain to you. But if you need at least a masters degree to work in a church/ministry then here is why I think your undergraduate degree shouldn’t be a degree in ministry and in my opinion should not come from a religious college.

1. You are going to cover everything that you would cover in an undergraduate ministry degree in greater depth during a Masters of Divinity. 

The Masters of Divinity was designed for people who have degrees outside of theology and ministry. It is one long stinking masters degree. It was 94 credits when I got mine and some programs go as high as 106 credits. The M.Div covers a ton of material so that it isn’t necessary for students to have a specific prerequisite degree. All that matters is that you have a degree from an accredited school, not which degree you have. So why not take advantage of this fact and get a different degree that might help you in something else? Getting a Bible/ministry degree will at best give you a two week advantage on most of your introductory M.Div courses.

2. Knowing something other than the Bible will help you relate to others better and that leads to better ministry.

When I first believed God was calling me into ministry I asked several ministers whom I respected what they would recommend I study initially. Almost unanimously  they told me business and/or psychology. That’s why I studied both. I have always been thankful for what I learned in both subjects. The knowledge has not only been put to practical use in the ministries that I have been a part of, but it has also enabled me to have some idea on how to talk with people in a variety of subjects. I love studying scripture and theology and will gladly talk with anyone about both but being able to talk about other subjects with people is what usually opens doors for me.

3. Bible colleges are private schools and therefore usually more expensive than state schools.

You really want to be able to follow God anywhere? Then don’t go into debt. Owing lots of student loans makes it much more difficult to hear God call you into situations that won’t pay a great deal. Bible colleges are private schools and therefore generally more expensive. This isn’t always true because private schools often have more scholarships available. In such situations it might actually be cheaper to go to a private school. This was the case for Adam, my oldest son, last year. Still private schools are a great way to rack up debt and in my opinion debt is the enemy of being able to ditch all and go anywhere God asks. Pam and I have almost finished 6 degrees (I’ll finish my doctorate in December) and we’ve never had a student loan. That would have been much more difficult to do if we had built up huge debt working on our undergraduate degrees. I am very thankful that we didn’t have to borrow any money for our schooling.

4. You need to spend time with people outside of the church culture and state schools are better for that.

Finally, I think the Christian bubble can be far too seductive for ministers. It becomes very easy to hang out with other people who basically think like you and value your role as a minister. It becomes tempting for ministers to not spend much time outside of the church culture. So my opinion is that young ministers should start spending time outside of the bubble early. What do you think is the better way to avoid the Christian bubble? Bible college or secular college? I vote secular.

Please don’t hear me criticizing anyone for going to Bible college. If you are or did then great for you. I’m not saying there is anything bad about getting an undergraduate degree in ministry or theology. I’m just saying that in my opinion it is best for young ministers to go to a secular school.

It is purely my opinion and since this is my blog I get to express it here.

Robin Williams' Arm Hair

I am fairly sure that I just saw Robin Williams walk into a Diary Queen in Marshfield, Wisconsin. I would post a photo but by the time I had my camera out he had already left the building. You are probably thinking that I merely saw someone who sort of looked like Robin Williams but I saw this guy’s arm hair. The hair on the guy’s forearms shouted “I’m the real Robin Williams” and we all know that arm hair doesn’t lie.

Darn Tough Socks are Wonderful

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A few years ago (2009) I bought a couple of pairs of Darn Tough wool running socks. I didn’t know anything about the brand at the time, but they were wool and I had some bonus cash from a company that I needed to spend before it expired. These socks fit the bill of spending free credit (I didn’t even have to pay for postage). I quickly came to prize these socks, which is why I was crushed when a pair developed a hole in the heel. The socks have a lifetime guarantee but I was fairly sure this wouldn’t that wear and tear wouldn’t count for that. So I sent the president of the company the sock with the hole in it and a hand written letter praising the sock and saying I was going to continue buying them no matter what because they really were the most comfortable and durable running sock I had ever worn. I gave him my address just in case he wanted to send me a new pair socks but I wasn’t really counting on it.

Guess what arrived in the mail today? Oh yeah, a new pair of socks and a sticker. Darn Tough Socks are really wonderful.

 

Cree Light

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It is pretty bright.

A few months ago I bought this flash light from Amazon because I had a gift card that had $4.70 left on it and the light was the only thing in that price range that I wanted. The light has dropped in price now and is less than $4. A seriously good deal for a light that kicks butt. It is really wonderful.

Small, bright, and sturdy. A great combination. I guess that I will have to buy a couple of these for the boys for Christmas.

Hope versus Hoaxes

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I love Jurgen Moltmann and I love this quote from him.

The reason I post this quote tonight is because I just read a blog post that made me think of it. You should go to “Reason for Change” (a blog I haven’t read before but will start reading, if for no other reason than its wonderful tag line, “theology isn’t science; it’s art”) and read Jayson Bradley’s wonderful post “4 Reasons Christians Need to Quit Sharing Hoaxes.” Bradley does a great job of pointing out some reasons that many Evangelical Christians need to stop acting like idiots and posting ludicrous hoax posts on the web and especially their social media sites. For example, the Pastor Jeremiah Steepek hoax that is going around right now. It didn’t happen. It would have been great if it had been presented as a parable. Instead it was presented as a fact and that makes it a lie since it didn’t really happen. Really all you have to do is do a quick search on Google and you can quickly determine what posts are hoaxes. In my example a quick Google reveals that Pastor Jeremiah Steepek doesn’t exist anywhere else on the web except for pages telling this same story. That’s a pretty good sign it is fake but snopes it honest enough to call it undetermined as of right now. If it is undetermined then perhaps you shouldn’t post it until you can figure out if it is real or not. It doesn’t take a research specialist to figure this stuff out. Snopes people. Just go to snopes. If it isn’t important enough for you to do some research on the subject then it isn’t important enough for you to post about it.

Anyhow, Bradley’s second reason Christians shouldn’t post about hoxes is that “they spread fear.” He has this wonderful paragraph explaining what he means.

The Christian message to the world isn’t, “Hey, look how bad things are!” It’s “take heart, He has overcome the world!” We don’t have to share every sensational and scary story—especially when their truth is suspect.

That paragraph was what pointed me back to the Moltmann quote. The good news of Jesus Christ is centered on hope not fear. Hope is the tool of God. Fear is the tool of those who cling to this present age. Hope transforms and resurrects. Fear destroys and inhibits. Hope creates. Fear terminates. Jesus calls His followers to operate out of His hope not out of fear. So why are many Evangelicals spreading hoaxes of fear? Doesn’t seems like a good way to live out our faith in the One Who brings hope to the hopeless.

So come on people. Don’t be stupid. Google these things before you post them.